325 results on '"Roberto Labianca"'
Search Results
2. Impact of influenza vaccination on survival of patients with advanced cancer receiving immune checkpoint inhibitors (INVIDIa-2): final results of the multicentre, prospective, observational studyResearch in context
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Melissa Bersanelli, Elena Verzoni, Alessio Cortellini, Raffaele Giusti, Lorenzo Calvetti, Paola Ermacora, Marilena Di Napoli, Annamaria Catino, Valentina Guadalupi, Giorgia Guaitoli, Vieri Scotti, Francesca Mazzoni, Antonello Veccia, Pamela Francesca Guglielmini, Fabiana Perrone, Marco Maruzzo, Ernesto Rossi, Chiara Casadei, Vincenzo Montesarchio, Francesco Grossi, Mimma Rizzo, Maria Grazia Travagliato Liboria, Manlio Mencoboni, Fable Zustovich, Lucia Fratino, Caterina Accettura, Saverio Cinieri, Andrea Camerini, Mariella Sorarù, Paolo Andrea Zucali, Serena Ricciardi, Antonio Russo, Giorgia Negrini, Maria Chiara Banzi, Gaetano Lacidogna, Giuseppe Fornarini, Letizia Laera, Claudia Mucciarini, Matteo Santoni, Claudia Mosillo, Andrea Bonetti, Lucia Longo, Donata Sartori, Editta Baldini, Michele Guida, Mauro Iannopollo, Roberto Bordonaro, Maria Francesca Morelli, Pierosandro Tagliaferri, Massimiliano Spada, Anna Ceribelli, Rosa Rita Silva, Franco Nolè, Giordano Beretta, Petros Giovanis, Daniele Santini, Stefano Luzi Fedeli, Oriana Nanni, Evaristo Maiello, Roberto Labianca, Carmine Pinto, Alberto Clemente, Michele Tognetto, Ugo De Giorgi, Sandro Pignata, Massimo Di Maio, Sebastiano Buti, and Diana Giannarelli
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Influenza-like illness ,Influenza vaccination ,Flu vaccine ,Immune checkpoint inhibitors ,Cancer patients ,ICI ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Summary: Background: The prospective multicentre observational INVIDIa-2 study investigated the clinical effectiveness of influenza vaccination in patients with advanced cancer receiving immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI). In this secondary analysis of the original trial, we aimed to assess the outcomes of patients to immunotherapy based on vaccine administration. Methods: The original study enrolled patients with advanced solid tumours receiving ICI at 82 Italian Oncology Units from Oct 1, 2019, to Jan 31, 2020. The trial's primary endpoint was the time-adjusted incidence of influenza-like illness (ILI) until April 30, 2020, the results of which were reported previously. Secondary endpoints (data cut-off Jan 31, 2022) included the outcomes of patients to immunotherapy based on vaccine administration, for which the final results are reported herein. A propensity score matching by age, sex, performance status, primary tumour site, comorbidities, and smoking habits was planned for the present analysis. Only patients with available data for these variables were included. The outcomes of interest were overall survival (OS), progression-free survival (PFS), objective response rate (ORR), and disease-control rate (DCR). Findings: The original study population consisted of 1188 evaluable patients. After a propensity score matching, 1004 patients were considered (502 vaccinated and 502 unvaccinated), and 986 of them were evaluable for overall survival (OS). At the median follow-up of 20 months, the influenza vaccination demonstrated a favourable impact on the outcome receiving ICI in terms of median OS [27.0 months (CI 19.5–34.6) in vaccinated vs. 20.9 months (16.6–25.2) in unvaccinated, p = 0.003], median progression-free survival [12.5 months (CI 10.4–14.6) vs. 9.6 months (CI 7.9–11.4), p = 0.049], and disease-control rate (74.7% vs. 66.5%, p = 0.005). The multivariable analyses confirmed the favourable impact of influenza vaccination in terms of OS (HR 0.75, 95% C.I. 0.62–0.92; p = 0.005) and DCR (OR 1.47, 95% C.I. 1.11–1.96; p = 0.007). Interpretation: The INVIDIa-2 study results suggest a favourable immunological impact of influenza vaccination on the outcome of cancer patients receiving ICI immunotherapy, further encouraging the vaccine recommendation in this population and supporting translational investigations about the possible synergy between antiviral and antitumour immunity. Funding: The Federation of Italian Cooperative Oncology Groups (FICOG), Roche S.p.A., and Seqirus.
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- 2023
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3. INfluenza Vaccine Indication During therapy with Immune checkpoint inhibitors: a multicenter prospective observational study (INVIDIa-2)
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Diana Giannarelli, Sandro Pignata, Vincenzo Montesarchio, Massimo Di Maio, Melissa Bersanelli, Sebastiano Buti, Raffaele Giusti, Marcello Tiseo, Marco Filetti, Corrado Ficorella, Elena Verzoni, Ugo De Giorgi, Carmine Pinto, Ernesto Rossi, Evaristo Maiello, Maria R Migliorino, Annamaria Catino, Francesca Mazzoni, Francesco Grossi, Giorgia Guaitoli, Marco Maruzzo, Giuseppe Aprile, Marilena Di Napoli, Giorgia Negrini, Antonio Russo, Saverio Cinieri, Mimma Rizzo, Fable Zustovich, Vieri Scotti, Alberto Clemente, Paola Ermacora, Pamela Francesca Guglielmini, Antonello Veccia, Chiara Casadei, Francesco Verderame, Lucia Fratino, Caterina Accettura, Manlio Mencoboni, Cinzia Baldessari, Andrea Camerini, Letizia Laera, Mariella Sorarù, Paolo Andrea Zucali, Valentina Guadalupi, Francesco Leonardi, Michele Tognetto, Francesco Di Costanzo, Francesco di Costanzo, Roberto Labianca, and Luigi Bernardi
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Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Background Until now, no robust data supported the efficacy, safety and recommendation for influenza vaccination in patients with cancer receiving immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs).Methods The prospective multicenter observational INfluenza Vaccine Indication During therapy with Immune checkpoint inhibitors (INVIDIa-2) study investigated the clinical effectiveness of influenza vaccination in patients with advanced cancer receiving ICIs, enrolled in 82 Italian centers from October 2019 to January 2020. The primary endpoint was the time-adjusted incidence of influenza-like illness (ILI) until April 30, 2020. Secondary endpoints regarded ILI severity and vaccine safety.Results The study enrolled 1279 patients; 1188 patients were evaluable for the primary endpoint analysis. Of them, 48.9% (581) received influenza vaccination. The overall ILI incidence was 8.2% (98 patients). Vaccinated patients were significantly more frequently elderly (p
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- 2021
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4. Validation of the Role of Thrombin Generation Potential by a Fully Automated System in the Identification of Breast Cancer Patients at High Risk of Disease Recurrence
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Patricia Gomez-Rosas, Marina Pesenti, Cristina Verzeroli, Cinzia Giaccherini, Laura Russo, Roberta Sarmiento, Giovanna Masci, Luigi Celio, Mauro Minelli, Sara Gamba, Carmen Julia Tartari, Carlo Tondini, Francesco Giuliani, Fausto Petrelli, Andrea D'Alessio, Giampietro Gasparini, Roberto Labianca, Armando Santoro, Filippo De Braud, Marina Marchetti, and Anna Falanga
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breast cancer ,disease recurrence ,hypercoagulability ,risk model ,thrombin generation ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
Background The measurement of thrombin generation (TG) potential by the calibrated automated thrombogram (CAT) assay provides a strong contribution in identifying patients at high risk of early disease recurrence (E-DR). However, CAT assay still needs standardization and clinical validation. Objective In this study, we aimed to validate the role of TG for E-DR prediction by means of the fully automated ST Genesia system. Methods A prospective cohort of 522 patients from the HYPERCAN study with newly diagnosed resected high-risk breast cancer was included. Fifty-two healthy women acted as controls. Plasma samples were tested for protein C, free-protein S, and TG by ST Genesia by using the STG-ThromboScreen reagent with and without thrombomodulin (TM). Results In the absence of TM, patients showed significantly higher peak and ETP compared with controls. In the presence of TM, significantly lower inhibition of ETP and Peak were observed in patients compared with controls. E-DR occurred in 28 patients; these patients had significantly higher peak and endogenous thrombin potential (ETP) in the absence of TM compared with disease-free patients. Multivariable analysis identified mastectomy, luminal B HER2-neg, triple negative subtypes, and ETP as independent risk factors for E-DR. These variables were combined to generate a risk assessment score, able to stratify patients in three-risk categories. The E-DR rates were 0, 4.7, and 13.5% in the low-, intermediate-, and high-risk categories (hazard ratio = 8.7; p
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- 2021
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5. Symptomatic COVID-19 in advanced-cancer patients treated with immune-checkpoint inhibitors: prospective analysis from a multicentre observational trial by FICOG
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Melissa Bersanelli, Diana Giannarelli, Ugo De Giorgi, Sandro Pignata, Massimo Di Maio, Elena Verzoni, Alberto Clemente, Valentina Guadalupi, Diego Signorelli, Marcello Tiseo, Raffaele Giusti, Marco Filetti, Marilena Di Napoli, Lorenzo Calvetti, Alessandro Cappetta, Paola Ermacora, Diego Zara, Fausto Barbieri, Cinzia Baldessari, Vieri Scotti, Francesca Mazzoni, Antonello Veccia, Pamela Francesca Guglielmini, Marco Maruzzo, Ernesto Rossi, Francesco Grossi, Chiara Casadei, Alessio Cortellini, Francesco Verderame, Vincenzo Montesarchio, Mimma Rizzo, Manlio Mencoboni, Fable Zustovich, Lucia Fratino, Saverio Cinieri, Giorgia Negrini, Maria Banzi, Mariella Sorarù, Paolo Andrea Zucali, Gaetano Lacidogna, Antonio Russo, Nicola Battelli, Giuseppe Fornarini, Claudia Mucciarini, Sergio Bracarda, Andrea Bonetti, Debora Pezzuolo, Lucia Longo, Donata Sartori, Mauro Iannopollo, Luigi Cavanna, Fausto Meriggi, Davide Tassinari, Claudia Corbo, Angela Gernone, Veronica Prati, Simona Carnio, Pasqualina Giordano, Angela Maria Dicorato, Claudio Verusio, Francesco Atzori, Francesco Carrozza, Stefania Gori, Antonino Castro, Sara Pilotto, Vanja Vaccaro, Elisabetta Garzoli, Francesco Di Costanzo, Evaristo Maiello, Roberto Labianca, Carmine Pinto, Michele Tognetto, and Sebastiano Buti
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Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Background: This prospective, multicentre, observational INVIDIa-2 study is investigating the clinical efficacy of influenza vaccination in advanced-cancer patients receiving immune-checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs), enrolled in 82 Italian centres, from October 2019 to January 2020. The primary endpoint was the incidence of influenza-like illness (ILI) until 30 April 2020. All the ILI episodes, laboratory tests, complications, hospitalizations and pneumonitis were recorded. Therefore, the study prospectively recorded all the COVID-19 ILI events. Patients and methods: Patients were included in this non-prespecified COVID-19 analysis, if alive on 31 January 2020, when the Italian government declared the national emergency. The prevalence of confirmed COVID-19 cases was detected as ILI episode with laboratory confirmation of SARS-CoV-2. Cases with clinical-radiological diagnosis of COVID-19 (COVID-like ILIs), were also reported. Results: Out of 1257 enrolled patients, 955 matched the inclusion criteria for this unplanned analysis. From 31 January to 30 April 2020, 66 patients had ILI: 9 of 955 cases were confirmed COVID-19 ILIs, with prevalence of 0.9% [95% confidence interval (CI): 0.3–2.4], a hospitalization rate of 100% and a mortality rate of 77.8%. Including 5 COVID-like ILIs, the overall COVID-19 prevalence was 1.5% (95% CI: 0.5–3.1), with 100% hospitalization and 64% mortality. The presence of elderly, males and comorbidities was significantly higher among patients vaccinated against influenza versus unvaccinated ( p = 0.009, p
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- 2020
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6. Thrombotic biomarkers for risk prediction of malignant disease recurrence in patients with early stage breast cancer
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Cinzia Giaccherini, Marina Marchetti, Giovanna Masci, Cristina Verzeroli, Laura Russo, Luigi Celio, Roberta Sarmiento, Sara Gamba, Carmen J. Tartari, Erika Diani, Alfonso Vignoli, Paolo Malighetti, Daniele Spinelli, Carlo Tondini, Sandro Barni, Francesco Giuliani, Fausto Petrelli, Andrea D’Alessio, Giampietro Gasparini, Filippo De Braud, Armando Santoro, Roberto Labianca, Anna Falanga, and on behalf of the HYPERCAN Investigators
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Diseases of the blood and blood-forming organs ,RC633-647.5 - Abstract
In cancer patients, hypercoagulability is a common finding. It has been associated with an increased risk of venous thromboembolism, but also to tumor proliferation and progression. In this prospective study of a large cohort of breast cancer patients, we aimed to evaluate whether pre-chemotherapy abnormalities in hemostatic biomarkers levels: (i) are associated with breast cancer-specific clinico-pathological features; and (ii) can predict for disease recurrence. D-dimer, fibrinogen, prothrombin fragment 1+2, and FVIIa/antithrombin levels were measured in 701 early-stage resected breast cancer patients candidate to adjuvant chemotherapy and prospectively enrolled in the HYPERCAN study. Significant prognostic parameters for disease recurrence were identified by Cox regression multivariate analysis and used for generating a risk assessment model. Pre-chemotherapy D-dimer, fibrinogen, and pro-thrombin fragment 1+2 levels were significantly associated with tumor size and lymph node metastasis. After 3.4 years of follow up, 71 patients experienced a recurrence. Cox multivariate analysis identified prothrombin fragment 1+2, tumor size, and Luminal B HER2-negative or triple negative molecular subtypes as independent risk factors for disease recurrence. Based on these variables, we generated a risk assessment model that significantly differentiated patients at low- and high-risk of recurrence (cumulative incidence: 6.2 vs. 20.7%; Hazard Ratio=3.5; P
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- 2020
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7. Khorana score and thromboembolic risk in stage II–III colorectal cancer patients: a analysis from the adjuvant TOSCA trial
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Sandro Barni, Gerardo Rosati, Sara Lonardi, Nicoletta Pella, Maria Banzi, Maria G. Zampino, Katia F. Dotti, Lorenza Rimassa, Paolo Marchetti, Evaristo Maiello, Fabrizio Artioli, Daris Ferrari, Roberto Labianca, Paolo Bidoli, Alberto Zaniboni, Alberto Sobrero, Vincenzo Iaffaioli, Sabino De Placido, Gian Luca Frassineti, Andrea Ciarlo, Angela Buonadonna, Nicola Silvestris, Elena Piazza, Lorenzo Pavesi, Mauro Moroni, Mario Clerico, Massimo Aglietta, Paolo Giordani, Francesca Galli, Fabio Galli, and Fausto Petrelli
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Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Background: The risk of venous thromboembolic events (VTE) during adjuvant chemotherapy for colorectal cancer (CRC) is unknown. We aim to evaluate if the Khorana score (KS) can predict this risk, and if it represents a prognostic factor for overall survival (OS) through a post hoc analysis of the phase III TOSCA trial of different durations (3- versus 6-months) of adjuvant chemotherapy. Methods: A logistic regression model was used to test the associations between the risk of VTE and the KS. The results are expressed as odds ratios (OR) with 95% confidence intervals (95% CI). To assess the effect of the KS on OS, multivariable analyses using Cox regression models were performed. The results are expressed as hazard ratios (HR) with 95% CI. Results: Among 1380 CRC patients with available data, the VTE risk ( n = 72 events: 5.2%) was similar in the two duration arms (5.5% versus 4.9%), with 0.2% of patients belonging to the high-risk KS group. Rates of VTE were similar in the low- and intermediate-risk groups (4.8% versus 6.4%). KS did not represent an independent predictive factor for VTE occurrence. Chemotherapy duration was not associated with VTE risk. In addition, KS was not prognostic for OS in multivariate analysis (HR: 0.92, 95% CI, 0.63–1.36; p = 0.6835). Conclusions: The use of the KS did not predict VTEs in a low–moderate thromboembolic risk population as CRC. These data did not support the use of KS to predict VTE during adjuvant chemotherapy, and suggest that other risk assessment models should be researched.
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- 2020
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8. Utility of the Khorana and the new-Vienna CATS prediction scores in cancer patients of the HYPERCAN cohort
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Marina, Marchetti, Silvia, Bolognini, Sara, Gamba, Cinzia, Giaccherini, Laura, Russo, Francesca, Schieppati, Julia, Tartari Carmen, Chiara, Ticozzi, Cristina, Verzeroli, Alfonso, Vignoli, Armando, Santoro, Giovanna, Masci, Filippo, De Braud, Antonia, Martinetti, Carlo, Tondini, Roberto, Labianca, Giampietro, Gasparini, Roberta, Sarmiento, Elisabetta, Gennaro, Mauro, Minelli, Sandro, Barni, Fausto, Petrelli, Mara, Ghilardi, Andrea, D’Alessio, Sara, Cecchini, Francesco, Giuliani, Paolo, Malighetti, Chiara, Morlotti, Daniele, Spinelli, Falanga, Anna, Verzeroli, Cristina, Giaccherini, Cinzia, Russo, Laura, Bolognini, Silvia, Gamba, Sara, Tartari, Carmen J., Schieppati, Francesca, Ticozzi, Chiara, Vignoli, Alfonso, Masci, Giovanna, Sarmiento, Roberta, Spinelli, Daniele, Malighetti, Paolo, Tondini, Carlo, Petrelli, Fausto, Giuliani, Francesco, D’Alessio, Andrea, Gasparini, Giampietro, Minelli, Mauro, De Braud, Filippo, Santoro, Armando, Labianca, Roberto, and Marchetti, Marina
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- 2023
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9. Prognostic Impact of Early Treatment and Oxaliplatin Discontinuation in Patients With Stage III Colon Cancer: An ACCENT/IDEA Pooled Analysis of 11 Adjuvant Trials
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Claire Gallois, Qian Shi, Jeffrey P. Meyers, Timothy Iveson, Steven R. Alberts, Aimery de Gramont, Alberto F. Sobrero, Daniel G. Haller, Eiji Oki, Anthony Frank Shields, Richard M. Goldberg, Rachel Kerr, Sara Lonardi, Greg Yothers, Caroline Kelly, Ioannis Boukovinas, Roberto Labianca, Frank A. Sinicrope, Ioannis Souglakos, Takayuki Yoshino, Jeffrey A. Meyerhardt, Thierry André, Demetris Papamichael, and Julien Taieb
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Cancer Research ,Oncology - Abstract
PURPOSE Oxaliplatin-based adjuvant chemotherapy in patients with stage III colon cancer (CC) for 6 months remains a standard in high-risk stage III patients. Data are lacking as to whether early discontinuation of all treatment (ETD) or early discontinuation of oxaliplatin (EOD) could worsen the prognosis. MATERIALS AND METHODS We studied the prognostic impact of ETD and EOD in patients with stage III CC from the ACCENT/IDEA databases, where patients were planned to receive 6 months of infusional fluorouracil, leucovorin, and oxaliplatin or capecitabine plus oxaliplatin. ETD was defined as discontinuation of treatment and EOD as discontinuation of oxaliplatin only before patients had received a maximum of 75% of planned cycles. Association between ETD/EOD and overall survival and disease-free survival (DFS) were assessed by Cox models adjusted for established prognostic factors. RESULTS Analysis of ETD and EOD included 10,447 (20.9% with ETD) and 7,243 (18.8% with EOD) patients, respectively. Compared with patients without ETD or EOD, patients with ETD or EOD were statistically more likely to be women, with Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status ≥ 1, and for ETD, older with a lower body mass index. In multivariable analyses, ETD was associated with a decrease in disease-free survival and overall survival (hazard ratio [HR], 1.61, P < .001 and HR, 1.73, P < .001), which was not the case for EOD (HR, 1.07, P = .3 and HR, 1.13, P = .1). However, patients who received < 50% of the planned cycles of oxaliplatin had poorer outcomes. CONCLUSION In patients treated with 6 months of oxaliplatin-based chemotherapy for stage III CC, ETD was associated with poorer oncologic outcomes. However, this was not the case for EOD. These data favor discontinuing oxaliplatin while continuing fluoropyrimidine in individuals with significant neurotoxicity having received > 50% of the planned 6-month chemotherapy.
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- 2023
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10. Utility of the Khorana and the new-Vienna CATS prediction scores in cancer patients of the HYPERCAN cohort
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Verzeroli, Cristina, primary, Giaccherini, Cinzia, additional, Russo, Laura, additional, Bolognini, Silvia, additional, Gamba, Sara, additional, Tartari, Carmen J., additional, Schieppati, Francesca, additional, Ticozzi, Chiara, additional, Vignoli, Alfonso, additional, Masci, Giovanna, additional, Sarmiento, Roberta, additional, Spinelli, Daniele, additional, Malighetti, Paolo, additional, Tondini, Carlo, additional, Petrelli, Fausto, additional, Giuliani, Francesco, additional, D’Alessio, Andrea, additional, Gasparini, Giampietro, additional, Minelli, Mauro, additional, De Braud, Filippo, additional, Santoro, Armando, additional, Labianca, Roberto, additional, Marchetti, Marina, additional, Falanga, Anna, additional, Marina, Marchetti, additional, Silvia, Bolognini, additional, Sara, Gamba, additional, Cinzia, Giaccherini, additional, Laura, Russo, additional, Francesca, Schieppati, additional, Julia, Tartari Carmen, additional, Chiara, Ticozzi, additional, Cristina, Verzeroli, additional, Alfonso, Vignoli, additional, Armando, Santoro, additional, Giovanna, Masci, additional, Filippo, De Braud, additional, Antonia, Martinetti, additional, Carlo, Tondini, additional, Roberto, Labianca, additional, Giampietro, Gasparini, additional, Roberta, Sarmiento, additional, Elisabetta, Gennaro, additional, Mauro, Minelli, additional, Sandro, Barni, additional, Fausto, Petrelli, additional, Mara, Ghilardi, additional, Andrea, D’Alessio, additional, Sara, Cecchini, additional, Francesco, Giuliani, additional, Paolo, Malighetti, additional, Chiara, Morlotti, additional, Daniele, Spinelli, additional, and Anna, Falanga, additional
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- 2023
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11. Utility of the Khorana and the new-Vienna CATS prediction scores in cancer patients of the HYPERCAN cohort
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Cristina Verzeroli, Cinzia Giaccherini, Laura Russo, Silvia Bolognini, Sara Gamba, Carmen J. Tartari, Francesca Schieppati, Chiara Ticozzi, Alfonso Vignoli, Giovanna Masci, Roberta Sarmiento, Daniele Spinelli, Paolo Malighetti, Carlo Tondini, Fausto Petrelli, Francesco Giuliani, Andrea D’Alessio, Giampietro Gasparini, Mauro Minelli, Filippo De Braud, Armando Santoro, Roberto Labianca, Marina Marchetti, Anna Falanga, Marchetti Marina, Bolognini Silvia, Gamba Sara, Giaccherini Cinzia, Russo Laura, Schieppati Francesca, Tartari Carmen Julia, Ticozzi Chiara, Verzeroli Cristina, Vignoli Alfonso, Santoro Armando, Masci Giovanna, De Braud Filippo, Martinetti Antonia, Tondini Carlo, Labianca Roberto, Gasparini Giampietro, Sarmiento Roberta, Gennaro Elisabetta, Minelli Mauro, Barni Sandro, Petrelli Fausto, Ghilardi Mara, D’Alessio Andrea, Cecchini Sara, Giuliani Francesco, Malighetti Paolo, Morlotti Chiara, Spinelli Daniele, and Falanga Anna
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Hematology - Published
- 2023
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12. Thrombin Generation and D-Dimer for Prediction of Disease Progression and Mortality in Patients with Metastatic Gastrointestinal Cancer
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Cinzia Giaccherini, Cristina Verzeroli, Laura Russo, Sara Gamba, Carmen Julia Tartari, Silvia Bolognini, Francesca Schieppati, Chiara Ticozzi, Roberta Sarmiento, Luigi Celio, Giovanna Masci, Carlo Tondini, Fausto Petrelli, Francesco Giuliani, Andrea D’Alessio, Filippo De Braud, Armando Santoro, Roberto Labianca, Giampietro Gasparini, Marina Marchetti, and Anna Falanga
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Cancer Research ,Oncology ,gastrointestinal cancer ,hypercoagulability ,prognosis ,survival ,D-dimer ,thrombin generation - Abstract
Background: the tight and reciprocal interaction between cancer and hemostasis has stimulated investigations on the possible role of hemostatic biomarkers in predicting specific cancer outcomes, such as disease progression (DP) and overall survival (OS). In a prospective cohort of newly diagnosed metastatic gastrointestinal (GI) cancer patients from the HYPERCAN study, we aimed to assess whether the hemostatic biomarker levels measured before starting any anticancer therapy may specifically predict for 6-months DP (6m-DP) and for 1-year OS (1y OS). Methods: plasma samples were collected and tested for thrombin generation (TG) as global hemostatic assay, and for D-dimer, fibrinogen, and prothrombin fragment 1 + 2 as hypercoagulation biomarkers. DP and mortality were monitored during follow-up. Results: A prospective cohort of 462 colorectal and 164 gastric cancer patients was available for analysis. After 6 months, DP occurred in 148 patients, providing a cumulative incidence of 24.8% (21.4–28.4). D-dimer and TG endogenous thrombin potential (ETP) were identified as independent risk factors for 6m-DP by multivariate Fine–Gray proportional hazard regression model corrected for age, cancer site, and >1 metastatic site. After 1 year, we observed an OS of 75.7% (71.9–79.0). Multivariate Cox regression analysis corrected for age, site of cancer, and performance status identified D-dimer and ETP as independent risk factors for 1y OS. Patients with one or both hemostatic parameters above the dichotomizing threshold were at higher risk for both 6m-DP and 1-year mortality. Conclusion.: in newly diagnosed metastatic GI cancer patients, pretreatment ETP and D-dimer appear promising candidate biomarkers for predicting 6m-DP and 1y OS. In this setting, for the first time, the role of TG as a prognostic biomarker emerges in a large prospective cohort.
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- 2022
13. Predictive Impact of Mucinous Tumors on the Clinical Outcome in Patients with Poorly Differentiated, Stage II Colon Cancer: A TOSCA Subgroup Analysis
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Francesca Bergamo, Roberto Labianca, Tosca Investigators, Maria Giulia Zampino, Anna Maria Bochicchio, Francesca Galli, Fabrizio Artioli, Monica Ronzoni, Giovanni Gerardo Cardellino, Domenico Bilancia, Maurizio Cantore, Maria Di Bartolomeo, Domenico Corsi, Lorenza Rimassa, Maria Banzi, F. Galli, Eliana Rulli, Giacomo Bregni, Gerardo Rosati, Stefano Tamberi, Rodolfo Mattioli, and Paolo Marchetti
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0301 basic medicine ,Oncology ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Colorectal cancer ,Population ,Subgroup analysis ,Adenocarcinoma ,03 medical and health sciences ,Folinic acid ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,Gastrointestinal Cancer ,medicine ,Humans ,Stage (cooking) ,education ,Neoplasm Staging ,Cancer staging ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Prognosis ,medicine.disease ,Oxaliplatin ,030104 developmental biology ,Chemotherapy, Adjuvant ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Colonic Neoplasms ,Fluorouracil ,Neoplasm Recurrence, Local ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background Although American Society of Clinical Oncology and European Society for Medical Oncology guidelines have identified the negative prognostic factors that clinicians have to consider when treating their patients with stage II colon cancer (CC), the role of histological subtype is controversial. Subjects, Materials, and Methods The randomized, multicenter, phase III TOSCA trial compared 3 versus 6 months of fluoropyrimidine-oxaliplatin adjuvant chemotherapy in 3,759 patients with high-risk stage II or stage III CC. The objective of this substudy was to evaluate the influence of histological subtypes on the impact of the treatment duration of adjuvant chemotherapy in terms of relapse-free survival (RFS) and overall survival (OS) in 85 mucinous adenocarcinoma (MUC) and 389 nonmucinous adenocarcinoma (NMUC) patients with high-risk stage II, grade 3 CC. Results A significant interaction between treatment duration and histology was observed in both RFS (p = .027) and OS (p = .017). In the subgroup of patients with MUC, worse RFS (adjusted hazard ratio [HR], 3.95; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.03–15.17; p = .045) and OS (HR, 9.56; 95% CI, 1.14–79.98; p = .037) were detected for patients treated in the 3-month arm. No statistically significant differences were found in the subgroup of patients with NMUC. Conclusion Patients with MUC, grade 3, stage II CC require special attention and may need 6 months of oxaliplatin-based chemotherapy. Larger studies are required to assess the combined use of histology and other prognostic/predictive factors to define the administration of chemotherapy in patients with stage II CC and to improve their prognosis. Implications for Practice Although ASCO and ESMO guidelines define the prognostic factors for patients with stage II colon cancer to establish the use of adjuvant chemotherapy, the influence of histological subtypes is controversial in this population. This study underscores that patients with grade 3 mucinous adenocarcinomas may need adjuvant chemotherapy with oxaliplatin and fluoropyrimidines for a duration of 6 months rather than 3 months.
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- 2020
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14. A randomized phase III study of fractionated docetaxel, oxaliplatin, capecitabine (low-tox) vs epirubicin, oxaliplatin and capecitabine (eox) in patients with locally advanced unresectable or metastatic gastric cancer: the lega trial
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Gerardo Rosati, Chiara Alessandra Cella, Luigi Cavanna, Carla Codecà, Michele Prisciandaro, Stefania Mosconi, Giovanna Luchena, Nicola Silvestris, Ilaria Bernardini, Rossana Casaretti, Federica Zoratto, Domenico Amoroso, Andrea Ciarlo, Sandro Barni, Stefano Cascinu, Cristina Davite, Alessandro Di Sanzo, Alessia Casolaro, Domenico Bilancia, and Roberto Labianca
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Oxaliplatin ,Cancer Research ,Treatment Outcome ,Oncology ,Stomach Neoplasms ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,Gastroenterology ,Humans ,General Medicine ,Docetaxel ,Fluorouracil ,Capecitabine ,Epirubicin - Abstract
EOX (epirubicin, oxaliplatin, and capecitabine) is one of the standard regimens for metastatic or locally advanced gastric cancer (GC). A new combination based on fractional docetaxel (low-TOX) has been developed in an attempt to increase the efficacy of EOX and reduce the heavy toxicity of classical docetaxel regimens.Overall, 169 previously untreated GC patients were randomized between EOX (arm A) and low-TOX (arm B). The primary endpoint was progression-free survival (PFS), while secondary ones were overall survival (OS), overall response rate (ORR), disease control rate (DCR), and tolerability. The study was designed to detect a 35% (80% power at a two-sided 5% significance level) PFS increase with low-TOX and an interim analysis for futility was planned after the first 127 events.At the cut-off date of interim analysis, median PFS was 6.3 months [95% confidence interval (CI) 5.0-8.1] in arm A vs 6.3 months (95% CI 5.0-7.8) in arm B, without statistical difference. OS was comparable in the two arms: 12.4 in arm A (95% CI 9.1-19.2) vs 11.5 months in arm B (95% CI 8.6-15.0). ORR was 33% and 24%, while DCR was 68% and 67%, respectively. Treatment modification (91% vs 78%, P = 0.017) and number of patients with CTC grade ≥ 3 adverse events (42 vs 35) were higher in arm B.A triplet regimen based on the fractional dose of docetaxel achieves no improvement over EOX which remains a potential standard treatment in many patients with inoperable, locally advanced or metastatic GC.
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- 2022
15. Early-Onset Colorectal Adenocarcinoma in the IDEA Database: Treatment Adherence, Toxicities, and Outcomes With 3 and 6 Months of Adjuvant Fluoropyrimidine and Oxaliplatin
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Vassilis Georgoulias, Alberto Sobrero, Eiji Oki, Thierry André, Takayuki Yoshino, Dewi Vernerey, Julien Taieb, Elizabeth C Smyth, Roberto Labianca, Ioannis Boukovinas, Irit Ben-Aharon, Florian Lordick, Elisa Fontana, Anne Giraut, M. Moehler, Qian Shi, Jeffrey P. Meyers, Mark N. K. Saunders, Anthony F. Shields, Ioannis Souglakos, Sara Lonardi, Jeffrey A. Meyerhardt, Andrea Harkin, and Timothy Iveson
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Oncology ,Male ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Colorectal cancer ,Treatment adherence ,medicine.medical_treatment ,MEDLINE ,Adenocarcinoma ,Internal medicine ,RAPID COMMUNICATIONS ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,medicine ,Adjuvant therapy ,Humans ,Adverse effect ,business.industry ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Prognosis ,Oxaliplatin ,Survival Rate ,Chemotherapy, Adjuvant ,Female ,Fluorouracil ,business ,Colorectal Neoplasms ,Adjuvant ,medicine.drug - Abstract
PURPOSE Early-onset (EO) colorectal cancer (CRC, age < 50 years) incidence is increasing. Decisions on optimal adjuvant therapy should consider treatment adherence, adverse events, and expected outcomes in a population with life expectancy longer than later-onset (LO) CRC (age ≥ 50 years). MATERIALS AND METHODS Individual patient data from six trials in the International Duration Evaluation of Adjuvant Chemotherapy database were analyzed. Characteristics, treatment adherence, and adverse events in stage II or III EO-CRC and LO-CRC were compared. To reduce confounders of non–cancer-related deaths because of age or comorbidities, time to recurrence (3-year relapse-free rate) and cancer-specific survival (5-year cancer-specific mortality rate) were considered. RESULTS Out of 16,349 patients, 1,564 (9.6%) had EO-CRC. Compared with LO-CRC, EO-CRC had better performance status (86% v 80%, P < .01), similar T stage (% T1-3/T4: 76/24 v 77/23, P = .97), higher N2 disease rate (24% v 22%, P < .01), more likely to complete the planned treatment duration (83.2% v 78.2%, P < .01), and received a higher treatment dose intensity, especially with 6-month regimens. Gastrointestinal toxicity was more common in EO-CRC; hematologic toxicity was more frequent in LO-CRC. Compared with LO-CRC, significantly worse cancer-specific outcomes were demonstrated especially in high-risk stage III EO-CRC: lower 3-year relapse-free rate (54% v 65%; hazard ratio [HR] 1.33; 95% CI, 1.14 to 1.55; P value < .001) and higher 5-year cancer-specific mortality rate (24% v 20%; HR 1.21; 95% CI, 1.00 to 1.47; P value < .06). In this subgroup, no difference was observed with 3 or 6 months of therapy, with equally poor disease-free survival rates (57% v 56%; HR 0.97; 95% CI, 0.73 to 1.29; P value = .85). CONCLUSION Young age is negatively prognostic in high-risk stage III CRC and associated with significantly higher relapse rate; this is despite better treatment adherence and higher administered treatment intensity, suggesting more aggressive disease biology.
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- 2021
16. Impact of diabetes and metformin use on recurrence and outcome in stage II-III colon cancer patients-A pooled analysis of three adjuvant trials
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Niki Christou, Elisabeth S. Bergen, Clemence Canton, Karine Le Malicot, Maria Di Bartolomeo, Fabio Galli, Francesca Galli, Roberto Labianca, Qian Shi, Steven R. Alberts, Richard M. Goldberg, Come Lepage, Frank A. Sinicrope, and Julien Taieb
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Oxaliplatin ,Cancer Research ,Oncology ,Colonic Neoplasms ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Humans ,Hypoglycemic Agents ,Metformin - Abstract
Diabetes mellitus (DM) has been associated with increased colorectal cancer (CRC) risk and worse prognosis in metastatic CRC patients. In this large, pooled analysis of non-metastatic colon cancer (CC) patients, we investigated the impact of DM and metformin treatment on recurrence and survival.A patient-level pooled analysis from three randomised adjuvant trials was performed. All patients had resection with curative intent of stage II or III CC and were treated with standard adjuvant fluoropyrimidine and oxaliplatin (±cetuximab). We investigated the impact of DM and metformin treatment on time to recurrence (TTR) and overall survival (OS).Of 5922 CC patients who had a median follow-up of 6.8 years, 621 patients (10.5%) had DM at CC diagnosis. Of those with DM, 327 patients (52.7%) were defined as metformin users and 294 patients (47.3%) as non-metformin users. CC patients with DM had a significantly shorter TTR (adjHR: 1.21; 95% CI, 1.03-1.42; p = 0.017) and OS (adjHR: 1.29; 95% CI, 1.09-1.52; p = 0.003) compared to non-diabetic CC patients. Diabetic CC patients not receiving metformin had a significantly worse TTR (adjHR: 1.28; 95% CI, 1.02-1.60; p = 0.032) and OS (adjHR: 1.41; 95% CI, 1.13-1.77; p = 0.003) as compared to non-diabetic patients. These worse outcomes were not significant in metformin users (TTR: adjHR: 1.16; 95% CI, 0.94-1.43; p = 0.168; OS: adjHR: 1.19; 95% CI, 0.95-1.48, p = 0.127).CC patients with DM had not only a significantly worse survival but also TTR. Furthermore, our data suggest that metformin may attenuate the detrimental effect of DM on CC patient outcomes.
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- 2021
17. Treatment breaks in first line treatment of advanced colorectal cancer: An individual patient data meta-analysis
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Kaitlyn K.H. Goey, Harpreet Wasan, Aimery de Gramont, Benoist Chibaudel, Tim Maughan, Axel Hinke, Roberto Labianca, Cornelis J A Punt, Kjell Magne Tveit, Susanna Hegewisch-Becker, Louise J. Brown, David E. Fisher, Richard Kaplan, Richard Adams, Eduardo Diaz Rubio, Dirk Arnold, and Miriam Koopman
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0301 basic medicine ,Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Colorectal cancer ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Active monitoring ,Drug Administration Schedule ,Maintenance Chemotherapy ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Clinical Trials, Phase II as Topic ,Maintenance therapy ,Quality of life ,Internal medicine ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,medicine ,Humans ,Chemotherapy ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,Thrombocytosis ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Evidence-based medicine ,Treatment breaks ,Intermittent therapy ,medicine.disease ,Prognosis ,Oxaliplatin ,030104 developmental biology ,Clinical Trials, Phase III as Topic ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Meta-analysis ,business ,Colorectal Neoplasms ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background\ud Intermittent systemic anti-cancer therapy in patients with advanced colorectal cancer (aCRC) may improve quality of life without compromising overall survival (OS). We aimed to use individual patient data meta-analysis (IPDMA) from multiple randomised controlled trials evaluating intermittent strategies to inform clinical practice. We also aimed to validate whether thrombocytosis as a predictive biomarker identified patients with significantly reduced OS receiving a complete treatment break.\ud Patients and Methods\ud An IPDMA of intermittent strategy impact on survival was undertaken, including all relevant trials in which data were available. Intermittent strategies were classified into two groups: a planned stopping of all therapy (“treatment break strategy”; 6 trials; 2,907 patients) or to the same treatment omitting oxaliplatin (“maintenance strategy”; 3 trials; 1,271 patients). The primary analysis sample was of patients successfully completing induction therapy. Additionally, a pre-planned analysis of the predictive value of thrombocytosis on survival under a continuous versus an intermittent strategy was undertaken.\ud Results\ud All trials had comparable inclusion criteria. The overall IPDMA of intermittent therapy versus continuous therapy demonstrated no detriment in OS (HR=1.03 [95% CI 0.93-1.14]), whether from complete break (HR 1.04 [95% CI 0.87-1.26]) or maintenance strategies (HR 0.99 [95% CI 0.87-1.13]). Thrombocytosis was confirmed as a marker of poor prognosis in aCRC, but did not predict for OS detriment from treatment break strategies (interaction HR=0.97 [95% CI 0.66-1.40] compared to continuous therapy).\ud Conclusion\ud The highest levels of evidence from this IPMDA indicate no detriment in survival for patients receiving an intermittent therapy strategy, either for maintenance or complete break strategies. Although, thrombocytosis is confirmed as a marker of poor prognosis, it is not predictive of poor outcome for patients treated with intermittent therapy. An intermittent chemotherapy strategy can therefore be applied irrespective of baseline platelet count and does not result in inferior OS compared to continuous chemotherapy.
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- 2021
18. Thrombotic biomarkers for risk prediction of malignant disease recurrence in patients with early stage breast cancer
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Giovanna Masci, Roberto Labianca, Sara Gamba, Cinzia Giaccherini, Filippo de Braud, Fausto Petrelli, Anna Falanga, Alfonso Vignoli, Erika Diani, Paolo Malighetti, Laura Russo, Armando Santoro, Carmen J Tartari, Carlo Tondini, Marina Marchetti, Giampietro Gasparini, Daniele Spinelli, Francesco Giuliani, Luigi Celio, Cristina Verzeroli, Andrea D'Alessio, Sandro Barni, Roberta Sarmiento, Giaccherini, C, Marchetti, M, Masci, G, Verzeroli, C, Russo, L, Celio, L, Sarmiento, R, Gamba, S, Tartari, C, Diani, E, Vignoli, A, Malighetti, P, Spinelli, D, Tondini, C, Barni, S, Giuliani, F, Petrelli, F, D'Alessio, A, Gasparini, G, De Braud, F, Santoro, A, Labianca, R, and Falanga, A
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Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Breast Neoplasms ,Disease ,Hypercoagulability ,03 medical and health sciences ,Breast cancer ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,Biomarkers, Tumor ,medicine ,Humans ,Cumulative incidence ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,Cancer recurrence ,business.industry ,Proportional hazards model ,Hazard ratio ,Coagulation & its Disorders ,Cancer ,Articles ,Hematology ,Prognosis ,Settore ING-IND/35 - Ingegneria Economico-Gestionale ,medicine.disease ,Hemostatic biomarker ,Neoplasm Recurrence, Local ,Risk assessment ,business ,Biomarkers ,030215 immunology - Abstract
In cancer patients, hypercoagulability is a common finding. It has been associated with an increased risk of venous thromboembolism, but also to tumor proliferation and progression. In this prospective study of a large cohort of breast cancer patients, we aimed to evaluate whether pre-chemotherapy abnormalities in hemostatic biomarkers levels: (i) are associated with breast cancer-specific clinico-pathological features; and (ii) can predict for disease recurrence. D-dimer, fibrinogen, prothrombin fragment 1+2, and FVIIa/antithrombin levels were measured in 701 early-stage resected breast cancer patients candidate to adjuvant chemotherapy and prospectively enrolled in the HYPERCAN study. Significant prognostic parameters for disease recurrence were identified by Cox regression multivariate analysis and used for generating a risk assessment model. Pre-chemotherapy D-dimer, fibrinogen, and pro-thrombin fragment 1+2 levels were significantly associated with tumor size and lymph node metastasis. After 3.4 years of follow up, 71 patients experienced a recurrence. Cox multivariate analysis identified prothrombin fragment 1+2, tumor size, and Luminal B HER2-negative or triple negative molecular subtypes as independent risk factors for disease recurrence. Based on these variables, we generated a risk assessment model that significantly differentiated patients at low- and high-risk of recurrence (cumulative incidence: 6.2 vs. 20.7%; Hazard Ratio=3.5; P
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- 2019
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19. Sex-Related Differences in Impact on Safety of Pharmacogenetic Profile for Colon Cancer Patients Treated with FOLFOX-4 or XELOX Adjuvant Chemotherapy
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Alberto Sobrero, Nicoletta Pella, Mauro Magnani, Maria Teresa Ionta, Pietro Sozzi, Vittorina Zagonel, Luisa Foltran, Francesco Graziano, Roberto Labianca, Silvia Lazzarelli, Monica Ronzoni, Enzo Veltri, Annamaria Ruzzo, Francesca Bergamo, Daniele Turci, Eliana Rulli, Luciano Frontini, Claudio Verusio, Sandro Barni, Claudia Mucciarini, Edoardo Biondi, Vincenzo Ricci, M. Nicolini, Annalisa Bramati, Sara Lonardi, Bruno Massidda, Francesca Galli, F. Galli, and Irene Bagaloni
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0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Colorectal cancer ,lcsh:Medicine ,Predictive markers ,Gastroenterology ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,GSTP1 ,0302 clinical medicine ,FOLFOX ,XRCC3 ,Internal medicine ,Genotype ,Medicine ,lcsh:Science ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,business.industry ,lcsh:R ,medicine.disease ,Colon cancer ,030104 developmental biology ,Methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase ,biology.protein ,lcsh:Q ,ERCC1 ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Pharmacogenetics ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Polymorphisms contribute to inter-individual differences and show a promising predictive role for chemotherapy-related toxicity in colon cancer (CC). TOSCA is a multicentre, randomized, non-inferiority, phase III study conducted in high-risk stage II/stage III CC patients treated with 6 vs 3 months of FOLFOX-4 or XELOX adjuvant chemotherapy. During this post-hoc analysis, 218 women and 294 men were genotyped for 17 polymorphisms: TYMS (rs34743033, rs2853542, rs11280056), MTHFR (rs1801133, rs1801131), ERCC1 (rs11615), XRCC1 (rs25487), XRCC3 (rs861539), XPD (rs1799793, rs13181), GSTP1 (rs1695), GSTT1/GSTM1 (deletion +/−), ABCC1 (rs2074087), and ABCC2 (rs3740066, rs1885301, rs4148386). The aim was to assess the interaction between these polymorphisms and sex, on safety in terms of time to grade ≥3 haematological (TTH), grade ≥3 gastrointestinal (TTG) and grade ≥2 neurological (TTN) toxicity. Interactions were detected on TTH for rs1801133 and rs1799793, on TTG for rs13181 and on TTN for rs11615. Rs1799793 GA genotype (p = 0.006) and A allele (p = 0.009) shortened TTH in men. In women, the rs11615 CC genotype worsened TTN (co-dominant model p = 0.008, recessive model p = 0.003) and rs13181 G allele improved the TTG (p = 0.039). Differences between the two sexes in genotype distribution of rs1885301 (p = 0.020) and rs4148386 (p = 0.005) were found. We highlight that polymorphisms could be sex-specific biomarkers. These results, however, need to be confirmed in additional series.
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- 2019
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20. Curative treatments for colon cancer during the COVID-19 pandemic era
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Roberto Labianca, Alberto Zaniboni, and Fausto Petrelli
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Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Colorectal cancer ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Internal medicine ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,Pandemic ,medicine ,Humans ,Pandemics ,Aged ,Chemotherapy ,business.industry ,Risk of infection ,COVID-19 ,Cancer ,Induction chemotherapy ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Regimen ,Oncology ,Chemotherapy, Adjuvant ,Colonic Neoplasms ,Colorectal Neoplasms ,business ,Adjuvant - Abstract
During the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, to protect patients with cancer, reduction in hospital access, reduction in myelosuppression risk, and postponing/withholding unnecessary treatments were important in order to reduce risk of infection. Little is known about the risk burden for patients with resected colorectal cancer (CRC). Use of an oral chemotherapy regimen represents a convenient, safe, and manageable therapy for both fit and elderly patients. In the metastatic setting, treatment of solitary metastases may be performed, omitting postresection chemotherapy due to lack of literature data. In case of unresectable CRC, short induction chemotherapy, followed by a maintenance phase, may improve compliance and reduce toxicity. In the adjuvant setting, a shorter duration (3 months) may be discussed with patients except in very high-risk cases. Clinical judgment may reduce the risk of COVID-19 exposure in patients with CRC. Oral regimens, treatment delay, and chemotherapy holiday are ways to minimize the global risk for patients during the COVID-19 era.
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- 2021
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21. Duration of adjuvant doublet chemotherapy (3 or 6 months) in patients with high-risk stage II colorectal cancer
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Axel Grothey, Takeharu Yamanaka, Jeffrey P. Meyers, Kentaro Yamazaki, Gerardo Rosati, Eiji Oki, Roberto Labianca, Ioannis Boukovinas, James Paul, Takayuki Yoshino, Rachel Kerr, Timothy Iveson, F. Galli, Qian Shi, Andrea Harkin, Sara Lonardi, Ioannis Souglakos, Fang-Shu Ou, Niels Henrik Hollander, Mark P Saunders, Alberto Sobrero, and Vassilis Georgoulias
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Oncology ,Cancer Research ,Chemotherapy ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Neurotoxicity ,MEDLINE ,Stage II Colorectal Cancer ,medicine.disease ,Oxaliplatin ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,In patient ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Duration (project management) ,business ,Adjuvant ,medicine.drug - Abstract
PURPOSE: As oxaliplatin results in cumulative neurotoxicity, reducing treatment duration without loss of efficacy would benefit patients and healthcare providers. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Four of the six studies in the International Duration Evaluation of Adjuvant Chemotherapy (IDEA) collaboration included patients with high-risk stage II colon and rectal cancers. Patients were treated (clinician and/or patient choice) with either fluorouracil, leucovorin, and oxaliplatin (FOLFOX) or capecitabine and oxaliplatin (CAPOX) and randomly assigned to receive 3- or 6-month treatment. The primary end point is disease-free survival (DFS), and noninferiority of 3-month treatment was defined as a hazard ratio (HR) of < 1.2- v 6-month arm. To detect this with 80% power at a one-sided type one error rate of 0.10, a total of 542 DFS events were required. RESULTS: 3,273 eligible patients were randomly assigned to either 3- or 6-month treatment with 62% receiving CAPOX and 38% FOLFOX. There were 553 DFS events. Five-year DFS was 80.7% and 83.9% for 3-month and 6-month treatment, respectively (HR, 1.17; 80% CI, 1.05 to 1.31; P [for noninferiority] .39). This crossed the noninferiority limit of 1.2. As in the IDEA stage III analysis, the duration effect appeared dependent on the chemotherapy regimen although a test of interaction was negative. HR for CAPOX was 1.02 (80% CI, 0.88 to 1.17), and HR for FOLFOX was 1.41 (80% CI, 1.18 to 1.68). CONCLUSION: Although noninferiority has not been demonstrated in the overall population, the convenience, reduced toxicity, and cost of 3-month adjuvant CAPOX suggest it as a potential option for high-risk stage II colon cancer if oxaliplatin-based chemotherapy is suitable. The relative contribution of the factors used to define high-risk stage II disease needs better understanding.
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- 2021
22. Oxaliplatin plus fluoropyrimidines as adjuvant therapy for colon cancer in older patients: A subgroup analysis from the TOSCA trial
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Gerardo Rosati, Sara Lonardi, Fabio Galli, Maria Di Bartolomeo, Monica Ronzoni, Maria G. Zampino, Maria Banzi, Alberto Zaniboni, Felice Pasini, Silvia Bozzarelli, Silvio K. Garattini, Daris Ferrari, Vincenzo Montesarchio, Andrea Mambrini, Libero Ciuffreda, Francesca Galli, Valeria Pusceddu, Chiara Carlomagno, Paolo Bidoli, Domenico Amoroso, Anna M. Bochicchio, Luca Frassineti, Domenico Corsi, Domenico Bilancia, Alessandro Pastorino, Alfonso De Stefano, Roberto Labianca, D. Bilancia, G. Rosati, V. Montesarchio, R.V. Iaffaioli, G. Nasti, B. Daniele, V. Zagonel, S. Lonardi, N. Pella, G. Aprile, F. Pasini, Roma P. Marchetti, A. Romiti, L. Ciuffreda, D. Ferrari, P. Foa, A. Zaniboni, R. Labianca, S. Mosconi, A. Sobrero, P. Bidoli, M. Cazzaniga, G.D. Beretta, D.C. Corsi, E. Cortesi, S. Barni, F. Petrelli, P. Allione, A.M. D'Arco, G. Valmadre, E. Piazza, E. Veltri, G. Vietti Ramus, L. Giustini, S. Tumulo, S. Cascinu, C. Granetto, F. Testore, M. Giordano, M. Moroni, M. Di Seri, A. Nuzzo, L. Angelelli, S. Gori, G. Farina, M. Aglietta, R. Franchi, M. Comandé, P. Giordani, G. Tonini, E. Bucci, A. Ballestrero, M. Benasso, C. Graiff, S. Bravi, O. Caffo, R.R. Silva, L. Frontini, S. Rota, L. Cozzi, M. Cantore, E. Maiello, S. Cinieri, N. Silvestris, S. Romito, V. Gebbia, M. Banzi, A. Santoro, F. Artioli, R. Mattioli, A. Contu, F. Di Costanzo, F. Leonardi, L. Cavanna, R. Passalacqua, D. Amoroso, P. Sozzi, M. D'Amico, D. Amadori, L. Frassineti, D. Turci, A. Ravaioli, E. Pasquini, A. Gambi, M. Faedi, G. Cruciani, E. Bajetta, M. Di Bartolomeo, L. Gianni, M. Ronzoni, M.T. Ionta, B. Massidda, M. Scartozzi, M.G. Zampino, A.M. Bochicchio, A. Ciarlo, A. Di Leo, S. Frustaci, G. Rangoni, A. Arizzoia, L. Pavesi, C. Verusio, G. Pinotti, A. Iop, S. De Placido, C. Carlomagno, V. Adamo, C. Ficorella, D. Natale, E. Greco, E. Rulli, F. Galli, D. Poli, L. Porcu, V. Torri, Rosati, G, Lonardi, S, Galli, F, Di Bartolomeo, M, Ronzoni, M, Zampino, M, Banzi, M, Zaniboni, A, Pasini, F, Bozzarelli, S, Garattini, S, Ferrari, D, Montesarchio, V, Mambrini, A, Ciuffreda, L, Pusceddu, V, Carlomagno, C, Bidoli, P, Amoroso, D, Bochicchio, A, Frassineti, L, Corsi, D, Bilancia, D, Pastorino, A, De Stefano, A, Labianca, R, Iaffaioli, R, Nasti, G, Daniele, B, Zagonel, V, Pella, N, Aprile, G, Marchetti, R, Romiti, A, Foa, P, Mosconi, S, Sobrero, A, Cazzaniga, M, Beretta, G, Cortesi, E, Barni, S, Petrelli, F, Allione, P, D'Arco, A, Valmadre, G, Piazza, E, Veltri, E, Ramus, G, Giustini, L, Tumulo, S, Cascinu, S, Granetto, C, Testore, F, Giordano, M, Moroni, M, Di Seri, M, Nuzzo, A, Angelelli, L, Gori, S, Farina, G, Aglietta, M, Franchi, R, Comande, M, Giordani, P, Tonini, G, Bucci, E, Ballestrero, A, Benasso, M, Graiff, C, Bravi, S, Caffo, O, Silva, R, Frontini, L, Rota, S, Cozzi, L, Cantore, M, Maiello, E, Cinieri, S, Silvestris, N, Romito, S, Gebbia, V, Santoro, A, Artioli, F, Mattioli, R, Contu, A, Di Costanzo, F, Leonardi, F, Cavanna, L, Passalacqua, R, Sozzi, P, D'Amico, M, Amadori, D, Turci, D, Ravaioli, A, Pasquini, E, Gambi, A, Faedi, M, Cruciani, G, Bajetta, E, Gianni, L, Ionta, M, Massidda, B, Scartozzi, M, Ciarlo, A, Di Leo, A, Frustaci, S, Rangoni, G, Arizzoia, A, Pavesi, L, Verusio, C, Pinotti, G, Iop, A, De Placido, S, Adamo, V, Ficorella, C, Natale, D, Greco, E, Rulli, E, Poli, D, Porcu, L, Torri, V, Rosati, G., Lonardi, S., Galli, F., Di Bartolomeo, M., Ronzoni, M., Zampino, M. G., Banzi, M., Zaniboni, A., Pasini, F., Bozzarelli, S., Garattini, S. K., Ferrari, D., Montesarchio, V., Mambrini, A., Ciuffreda, L., Pusceddu, V., Carlomagno, C., Bidoli, P., Amoroso, D., Bochicchio, A. M., Frassineti, L., Corsi, D., Bilancia, D., Pastorino, A., De Stefano, A., Labianca, R., Iaffaioli, R. V., Nasti, G., Daniele, B., Zagonel, V., Pella, N., Aprile, G., Marchetti, R. P., Romiti, A., Foa, P., Mosconi, S., Sobrero, A., Cazzaniga, M., Beretta, G. D., Cortesi, E., Barni, S., Petrelli, F., Allione, P., D'Arco, A. M., Valmadre, G., Piazza, E., Veltri, E., Ramus, G. V., Giustini, L., Tumulo, S., Cascinu, S., Granetto, C., Testore, F., Giordano, M., Moroni, M., Di Seri, M., Nuzzo, A., Angelelli, L., Gori, S., Farina, G., Aglietta, M., Franchi, R., Comande, M., Giordani, P., Tonini, G., Bucci, E., Ballestrero, A., Benasso, M., Graiff, C., Bravi, S., Caffo, O., Silva, R. R., Frontini, L., Rota, S., Cozzi, L., Cantore, M., Maiello, E., Cinieri, S., Silvestris, N., Romito, S., Gebbia, V., Santoro, A., Artioli, F., Mattioli, R., Contu, A., Di Costanzo, F., Leonardi, F., Cavanna, L., Passalacqua, R., Sozzi, P., D'Amico, M., Amadori, D., Turci, D., Ravaioli, A., Pasquini, E., Gambi, A., Faedi, M., Cruciani, G., Bajetta, E., Gianni, L., Ionta, M. T., Massidda, B., Scartozzi, M., Ciarlo, A., Di Leo, A., Frustaci, S., Rangoni, G., Arizzoia, A., Pavesi, L., Verusio, C., Pinotti, G., Iop, A., De Placido, S., Adamo, V., Ficorella, C., Natale, D., Greco, E., Rulli, E., Poli, D., Porcu, L., Torri, V., and Corsi, D. C.
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0301 basic medicine ,Oncology ,Male ,Cancer Research ,Colorectal cancer ,Leucovorin ,Efficacy ,Older patient ,0302 clinical medicine ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,Stage (cooking) ,Aged, 80 and over ,Colonic Neoplasm ,Prognostic factor ,Middle Aged ,Prognosis ,Colon cancer ,Survival Rate ,Oxaliplatin ,Chemotherapy, Adjuvant ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Colonic Neoplasms ,Female ,Fluorouracil ,medicine.drug ,Human ,Compliance ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Prognosi ,Adjuvant chemotherapy ,Older patients ,Prognostic factors ,Subgroup analysis ,Follow-Up Studie ,03 medical and health sciences ,Internal medicine ,Post-hoc analysis ,medicine ,Adjuvant therapy ,Humans ,Capecitabine ,Cancer staging ,Aged ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocol ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,030104 developmental biology ,Neoplasm Recurrence, Local ,business ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Background: Previous studies on oxaliplatin and fluoropyrimidines as adjuvant therapy in older patients with stage III colon cancer (CC) produced conflicting results. Patients and methods: We assessed the impact of age on time to tumour recurrence (TTR), disease-free survival (DFS), cancer-specific survival (CSS), and overall survival (OS) in 2360 patients with stage III CC (1667 aged
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- 2021
23. Long Term Survival With Regorafenib: REALITY (Real Life in Italy) Trial - A GISCAD Study
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Pina Ziranu, Stefano Mariani, Floriana Nappo, Giulia Piacentini, Nicole Liscia, Sara Lonardi, Manlio Mencoboni, Alessandra Boccaccino, Veronica Conca, Roberto Labianca, Valeria Pusceddu, Alberto Zaniboni, Gemma Zucchelli, Maria Banzi, Marco Puzzoni, Eleonora Lai, Manuela Dettori, Chiara Cremolini, Saverio Cinieri, and Mario Scartozzi
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Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Multivariate analysis ,Colorectal cancer ,Pyridines ,Logistic regression ,Liver progression ,Long term survivors ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Internal medicine ,Regorafenib ,Multicenter trial ,medicine ,Humans ,Progression-free survival ,Retrospective Studies ,Univariate analysis ,business.industry ,Metastatic colorectal cancer ,Phenylurea Compounds ,Gastroenterology ,Tolerability ,Treatment modification ,medicine.disease ,chemistry ,business ,Colorectal Neoplasms - Abstract
Background Regorafenib is a key agent in metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC), but no validated factors predicting longer survival are available. Patients and Methods REALITY was a retrospective multicenter trial in regorafenib-treated mCRC patients with overall survival (OS) ≥ 6 months. We aimed to assess the association between clinical parameters and outcome to define a panel identifying long term survivors among regorafenib candidates. Primary and secondary endpoints were OS and progression free survival (PFS), respectively. Statistical analysis was performed with MedCalc (survival distribution: Kaplan-Meier; survival comparison: log-rank test; independent role of significant variables at univariate analysis: logistic regression). Results Hundred regorafenib-treated mCRC patients with OS ≥ 6 months were enrolled. Median OS was 11.5 m (95%CI:9.60-12.96); median PFS was 4.2 months (95% CI:3.43-43.03). The absence of liver progression and of dose and/or schedule changes during the first 4 cycles (mainly for good tolerability) were independently correlated at multivariate analysis with OS (Exp(b)1.8869, P= .0277and Exp(b)2.2000, P = .0313) and PFS (Exp(b)2.1583, P = .0065 and Exp(b)2.3036, P= .0169). Patients with neither of these variables had a significantly improved OS (n = 14, 20.8 months; 95% CI:12.967-55.267) versus others (n = 86, 10 months; 95% CI:8.367-12.167; HR = 0.4902, P = .0045) and PFS (11.3 months, 95%CI:4.267-35.8 vs. 3.9 months, 95% CI:3.167-43.033; HR = 0.4648, P = .0086). Conclusion These 2 factors might allow clinicians to better identify patients more likely to benefit from regorafenib. Toxicity management remains crucial.
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- 2021
24. Nab-paclitaxel/gemcitabine combination is more effective than gemcitabine alone in locally advanced, unresectable pancreatic cancer – A GISCAD phase II randomized trial
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Francesca Negri, Maria Banzi, Andrea Spallanzani, Francesco Perrone, Alberto Sobrero, Roberto Bianco, Andrea Casadei Gardini, Luigi Cavanna, Daris Ferrari, Ciro Gallo, Maria Carmela Piccirillo, Rossana Berardi, Roberta Marciano, Silvia Noventa, Giordano D. Beretta, Alberto Zaniboni, Domenica Ferrara, Alberto Morabito, Roberto Labianca, Alessandro Bittoni, Silvana Leo, Stefano Cascinu, Domenico Bilancia, Stefania Mosconi, Cristina Mosconi, Cascinu, S., Berardi, R., Bianco, R., Bilancia, D., Zaniboni, A., Ferrari, D., Mosconi, S., Spallanzani, A., Cavanna, L., Leo, S., Negri, F., Beretta, G. D., Sobrero, A., Banzi, M., Morabito, A., Bittoni, A., Marciano, R., Ferrara, D., Noventa, S., Piccirillo, M. C., Labianca, R., Mosconi, C., Casadei Gardini, A., Gallo, C., Perrone, F., Cascinu, Stefano, Berardi, Rossana, Bianco, Roberto, Bilancia, Domenico, Zaniboni, Alberto, Ferrari, Dari, Mosconi, Stefania, Spallanzani, Andrea, Cavanna, Luigi, Leo, Silvana, Negri, Francesca, Beretta, Giordano D, Sobrero, Alberto, Banzi, Maria, Morabito, Alberto, Bittoni, Alessandro, Marciano, Roberta, Ferrara, Domenica, Noventa, Silvia, Piccirillo, Maria C, Labianca, Roberto, Mosconi, Cristina, Casadei Gardini, Andrea, Gallo, Ciro, and Perrone, Francesco
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0301 basic medicine ,Male ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Gastroenterology ,Deoxycytidine ,law.invention ,0302 clinical medicine ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,Medicine ,Advanced pancreatic cancer ,Nab-paclitaxel ,Unresectable Pancreatic Cancer ,Pancreatic Neoplasm ,Combination chemotherapy ,Middle Aged ,Prognosis ,Survival Rate ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Female ,medicine.drug ,Human ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Paclitaxel ,Prognosi ,Locally advanced ,Adenocarcinoma ,Follow-Up Studie ,03 medical and health sciences ,Phase II randomized trial ,Internal medicine ,Albumins ,Humans ,Aged ,Chemotherapy ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocol ,business.industry ,Albumin ,medicine.disease ,Gemcitabine ,Pancreatic Neoplasms ,030104 developmental biology ,Paclitaxel and gemcitabine ,business ,Progressive disease ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Background The role of combination chemotherapy has not yet been established in unresectable locally advanced pancreatic cancer (LAPC) lacking dedicated randomized trials. Methods This phase II trial tested the efficacy of Nab-paclitaxel (NAB-P)/Gemcitabine (G) versus G alone. Patients were randomized, 1:1 to G 1000 mg/m2 on days 1, 8 and 15 every 28 days versus NAB-P 125 mg/m2 on days 1, 8 and 15 every 28 days plus G 1000 mg/m2 on days 1, 8 and 15 every 28 days. Disease progression rate after three cycles of chemotherapy was the primary end-point. Progression-free survival (PFS), overall survival (OS) and response rate were secondary end-points. Findings A total of124 patients were enrolled. The study showed a reduction of a progressive disease from 45.6% with G to 25.4% with NAB-P/G (P = 0.01) at 3 months. Noteworthy, at 6 months in the G arm, 35.6% of patients present a metastatic spread versus 20.8% in the NAB/G arm. The response rate was 5.3% in the G arm and 27% in the NAB/G arm. Median PFS was 4 months for the G arm and 7 months for the NAB-P/G arm. Median OS was 10.6 in the G arm and 12.7 months in the NAB-P/G arm. One patient died during treatment with G due to a stroke. Interpretation. NAB-P/G reduced the rate of LAPC patients progressing after three cycles of chemotherapy compared with G, especially in terms of distant relapses. It positively affects PFS. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first randomized trial providing evidence that combination chemotherapy is superior to gemcitabine alone in this setting. ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier NCT02043730 .
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- 2021
25. Effect of duration of adjuvant chemotherapy for patients with stage III colon cancer (IDEA collaboration): final results from a prospective, pooled analysis of six randomised, phase 3 trials
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Donna Niedzwiecki, Vassilis Georgoulias, Axel Grothey, Jeffrey P. Meyers, Valter Torri, Alberto Sobrero, Thierry André, Andrea Harkin, Roberto Labianca, Qiang Shi, Dewi Vernerey, Julien Taieb, Takeharu Yamanaka, Ioannis Souglakos, Mark P Saunders, Eiji Oki, Anthony F. Shields, Timothy Iveson, Ioannis Boukovinas, Jeffrey A. Meyerhardt, and Takayuki Yoshino
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0301 basic medicine ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Organoplatinum Compounds ,Leucovorin ,Context (language use) ,Disease-Free Survival ,Drug Administration Schedule ,Capecitabine ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,FOLFOX ,Internal medicine ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,medicine ,Clinical endpoint ,Humans ,Multicenter Studies as Topic ,Prospective Studies ,Aged ,Neoplasm Staging ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,business.industry ,Hazard ratio ,Cancer ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Oxaliplatin ,Regimen ,030104 developmental biology ,Oncology ,Clinical Trials, Phase III as Topic ,Chemotherapy, Adjuvant ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Colonic Neoplasms ,Female ,Fluorouracil ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Summary Background A prospective, pooled analysis of six randomised phase 3 trials was done to investigate disease-free survival regarding non-inferiority of 3 months versus 6 months of adjuvant chemotherapy for patients with stage III colon cancer; non-inferiority was not shown. Here, we report the final overall survival results. Methods In this prospective, pooled analysis of six randomised phase 3 trials, we included patients with stage III colon cancer aged at least 18 years with an Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status of 0–1 recruited between June 20, 2007, and Dec 31, 2015, across 12 countries in the CALGB/SWOG 80702, IDEA France, SCOT, ACHIEVE, TOSCA, and HORG trials, who started any treatment (modified intention-to-treat). Patients in all trials were randomly assigned to 3 months or 6 months of adjuvant fluorouracil, leucovorin, and oxaliplatin (FOLFOX) every 2 weeks or capecitabine and oxaliplatin (CAPOX) in different doses and methods every 3 weeks, at the treating physician's discretion. The primary endpoint was disease-free survival (time to relapse, secondary colorectal primary tumour, or death due to all causes), and overall survival (time to death due to all causes) was the prespecified secondary endpoint. The non-inferiority margin for overall survival was set as a hazard ratio (HR) of 1·11. Pre-planned subgroup analyses included regimen and risk group. Non-inferiority was declared if the one-sided false discovery rate adjusted (FDRadj) p value was less than 0·025. Findings With median follow-up of 72·3 months (IQR 72·2–72·5), 2584 deaths among 12 835 patients were observed. 5064 (39·5%) patients received CAPOX and 7771 (60·5%) received FOLFOX. 5-year overall survival was 82·4% (95% CI 81·4–83·3) with 3 months of therapy and 82·8% (81·8–83·8) with 6 months of therapy (HR 1·02 [95% CI 0·95–1·11]; non-inferiority FDRadj p=0·058). For patients treated with CAPOX, 5-year overall survival was 82·1% (80·5–83·6) versus 81·2% (79·2–82·9; HR 0·96 [0·85–1·08]); non-inferiority FDRadj p=0·033), and for patients treated with FOLFOX 5-year overall survival was 82·6% (81·3–83·8) and 83·8% (82·6–85·0; HR 1·07 [0·97–1·18]; non-inferiority FDRadj p=0·34). Updated disease-free survival results confirmed previous findings (HR 1·08 [95% CI 1·02–1·15]; non-inferiority FDRadj p=0·25). Data on adverse events were not further recorded. Interpretation Non-inferiority of 3 months versus 6 months of adjuvant chemotherapy for patients with stage III colon cancer was not confirmed in terms of overall survival, but the absolute 0·4% difference in 5-year overall survival should be placed in clinical context. Overall survival results support the use of 3 months of adjuvant CAPOX for most patients with stage III colon cancer. This conclusion is strengthened by the substantial reduction of toxicities, inconveniencies, and cost associated with a shorter treatment duration. Funding US National Cancer Institute.
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- 2020
26. From CENTRAL to SENTRAL (SErum aNgiogenesis cenTRAL): Circulating Predictive Biomarkers to Anti-VEGFR Therapy
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Vittorina Zagonel, Maria Giulia Zampino, Carla Codecà, Pina Ziranu, Nicoletta Pella, Gerardo Rosati, M. Libertini, Domenico Germano, Bruno Daniele, Pietro Sozzi, Luigi Cavanna, Mariaelena Casagrande, Antonio Zizzi, Roberto Labianca, Alberto Zaniboni, Sara Lonardi, Mario Scartozzi, Stefano Cascinu, Riccardo Giampieri, Eleonora Lai, Marco Puzzoni, Daris Ferrari, Laura Demurtas, Valeria Pusceddu, Giampieri, R., Ziranu, P., Daniele, B., Zizzi, A., Ferrari, D., Lonardi, S., Zaniboni, A., Cavanna, L., Rosati, G., Casagrande, M., Pella, N., Demurtas, L., Zampino, M. G., Sozzi, P., Pusceddu, V., Germano, D., Lai, E., Zagonel, V., Codeca, C., Libertini, M., Puzzoni, M., Labianca, R., Cascinu, S., and Scartozzi, M.
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0301 basic medicine ,Oncology ,Placental growth factor ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Bevacizumab ,Circulating biomarkers ,Colorectal cancer ,FGF2 ,bevacizumab ,lcsh:RC254-282 ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Folinic acid ,angiogenesis ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Progression-free survival ,business.industry ,circulating biomarkers ,lcsh:Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,medicine.disease ,VEGF ,Colon cancer ,Irinotecan ,Regimen ,030104 developmental biology ,colon cancer ,PlGF ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,FOLFIRI ,Angiogenesis ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background: In the last decade, a series of analyses failed to identify predictive biomarkers of resistance/susceptibility for anti-angiogenic drugs in metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC). We conducted an exploratory preplanned analysis of serum pro-angiogenic factors (SErum aNgiogenesis-cenTRAL) in 72 mCRC patients enrolled in the phase II CENTRAL (ColorEctalavastiNTRiAlLdh) trial, with the aim to identify potential predictive factors for sensitivity/resistance to first line folinic acid-fluorouracil-irinotecan regimen (FOLFIRI) plus bevacizumab. Methods: First-line FOLFIRI/bevacizumab patients were prospectively assessed for the following circulating pro-angiogenic factors, evaluated with ELISA (enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay)-based technique at baseline and at every cycle: Vascular endothelial growth factor A (VEGF-A), hepatocyte growth factor (HGF), stromal derived factor-1 (SDF-1), placental derived growth factor (PlGF), fibroblast growth factor-2 (FGF-2), monocyte chemotactic protein-3 (MCP-3), interleukin-8 (IL-8). Results: Changes in circulating FGF-2 levels among different blood samples seemed to correlate with clinical outcome. Patients who experienced an increase in FGF-2 levels at the second cycle of chemotherapy compared to baseline, had a median Progression Free Survival (mPFS) of 12.85 vs. 7.57 months (Hazard Ratio&mdash, HR: 0.73, 95% Confidence Interval&mdash, CI: 0.43-1.27, p = 0.23). Similar results were seen when comparing FGF-2 concentrations between baseline and eight-week time point (mPFS 12.98 vs. 8.00 months, HR: 0.78, 95% CI: 0.46&ndash, 1.33, p = 0.35). Conclusions: Our pre-planned, prospective analysis suggests that circulating FGF-2 levels&rsquo, early increase could be used as a marker to identify patients who are more likely to gain benefit from FOLFIRI/bevacizumab first-line therapy.
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- 2020
27. Assessment of Duration and Effects of 3 vs 6 Months of Adjuvant Chemotherapy in High-Risk Stage II Colorectal Cancer: A Subgroup Analysis of the TOSCA Randomized Clinical Trial
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F. Galli, Alberto Sobrero, Giovanni Gerardo Cardellino, Sara Lonardi, Rodolfo Mattioli, Salvatore Corallo, Libero Ciuffreda, Roberto Labianca, Lorenza Rimassa, Maria Giulia Zampino, Saverio Cinieri, Valeria Pusceddu, Monica Ronzoni, Eliana Rulli, Fausto Petrelli, Andrea Mambrini, Domenico Corsi, Gerardo Rosati, Vittorina Zagonel, Maria Banzi, Paolo Marchetti, Alberto Zaniboni, and Evaristo Maiello
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Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Colorectal cancer ,Brief Report ,CAPOX Regimen ,medicine.disease ,Gastroenterology ,digestive system diseases ,Oxaliplatin ,03 medical and health sciences ,Folinic acid ,Regimen ,0302 clinical medicine ,Oncology ,FOLFOX ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Internal medicine ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,business ,Survival rate ,medicine.drug ,Cancer staging - Abstract
Importance The addition of oxaliplatin to the standard 6-month fluorouracil-based adjuvant chemotherapy in stage II colorectal cancer has been reported to reduce the risk of relapse although it does not increase survival. The Three or Six Colon Adjuvant (TOSCA) trial compared 3 months with 6 months of adjuvant fluoropyrimidine and oxaliplatin-based chemotherapy in patients with stage III colon cancer. The utility remains unknown. Objective To assess the noninferiority and toxic effects of 3 vs 6 months of FOLFOX (fluorouracil, leucovorin, and oxaliplatin) or CAPOX (capecitabine plus oxaliplatin) adjunct chemotherapy among patients with high-risk stage II resected colorectal cancer enrolled in the TOSCA trial. Design, Setting, and Participants The TOSCA study was a noninferiority phase 3 randomized clinical trial conducted from June 2007 to March 2013 in 130 Italian centers. Included patients had resected colorectal cancer located 12 cm from the anal verge by endoscopy or above the peritoneal reflection at surgery. In this preplanned study assessing the per-protocol population, 5-year relapse-free survival was evaluated in 1254 patients with high-risk stage II resected colorectal cancer who had received adjuvant FOLFOX (fluorouracil, leucovorin, and oxaliplatin) or CAPOX (capecitabine plus oxaliplatin). Interventions Patients were originally randomized (1:1) in the TOSCA trial to receive 3 months (experimental group) or 6 months (control) of standard doses of FOLFOX or CAPOX at the discretion of the treating physician. Main Outcome and Measures A hazard ratio of at least 1.2 between the 3-month and 6-month chemotherapy groups was set to reject the null hypothesis of noninferiority. Results Overall, 1254 patients (mean [SD] age, 62.4 [9.8] years; 565 women [45.1%]) with clinical high-risk stage II resected colorectal cancer were analyzed at a median follow-up of 62 months (interquartile range, 53-71) months. Of them, 301 patients (24.0%) had pT4N0M0 tumors, and the remaining 953 patients (76.0%) had high-risk pT3N0M0 tumors; 776 patients (61.9%) received FOLFOX and 478 (38.1%) received CAPOX. The 5-year relapse-free survival was 82.2% for the 3-month arm and 88.2% for the 6-month arm, with an estimated hazard ratio of 1.41 (95% CI, 1.05-1.89;P = .86 for noninferiority). For CAPOX, the 5-year relapse-free survival was similar in the 2 arms (difference, 0.76% favoring the 6-month arm; 95% CI, −6.28% to 7.80%), whereas for FOLFOX, the difference was pronounced: 8.56% in favor of the longer-duration arm (95% CI, 3.45%-13.67%). Nevertheless, the test for an interaction between duration and regimen was not statistically significant. Neurotoxicity was approximately 5 times lower in the shorter duration arm than in the longer duration arm. Conclusions and Relevance In the 3-month arm, the treatment was significantly less toxic than in the 6-month arm. Noninferiority was not shown for 5-year relapse-free survival. However, a possible regimen effect was observed, suggesting that either 3 months of CAPOX or 6 months of FOLFOX therapy can be used whenever an oxaliplatin doublet is indicated for treatment of patients with stage II colorectal cancer. Trial Registration ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier:NCT0064660
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- 2020
28. Author Correction: Sex-Related Differences in Impact on Safety of Pharmacogenetic Profile for Colon Cancer Patients Treated with FOLFOX-4 or XELOX Adjuvant Chemotherapy
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Alberto Sobrero, M. Nicolini, Sara Lonardi, Nicoletta Pella, F. Galli, Irene Bagaloni, Edoardo Biondi, Bruno Massidda, Luciano Frontini, Mauro Magnani, Enzo Veltri, Maria Teresa Ionta, Francesca Bergamo, Eliana Rulli, Annalisa Bramati, Sandro Barni, Monica Ronzoni, Claudia Mucciarini, Francesca Galli, Silvia Lazzarelli, Annamaria Ruzzo, Daniele Turci, Francesco Graziano, Roberto Labianca, Vittorina Zagonel, Claudio Verusio, Luisa Foltran, Vincenzo Ricci, and Pietro Sozzi
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Male ,Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Organoplatinum Compounds ,Oxaloacetates ,Colorectal cancer ,Adjuvant chemotherapy ,Leucovorin ,lcsh:Medicine ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,Biomarkers, Pharmacological ,Text mining ,FOLFOX ,Internal medicine ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,medicine ,Humans ,lcsh:Science ,Author Correction ,Capecitabine ,Aged ,Sex Characteristics ,Multidisciplinary ,business.industry ,lcsh:R ,Sex related ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Multidrug Resistance-Associated Protein 2 ,Neoplasm Proteins ,Pharmacogenomic Testing ,Chemotherapy, Adjuvant ,Colonic Neoplasms ,lcsh:Q ,Female ,Fluorouracil ,business ,Pharmacogenetics ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Polymorphisms contribute to inter-individual differences and show a promising predictive role for chemotherapy-related toxicity in colon cancer (CC). TOSCA is a multicentre, randomized, non-inferiority, phase III study conducted in high-risk stage II/stage III CC patients treated with 6 vs 3 months of FOLFOX-4 or XELOX adjuvant chemotherapy. During this post-hoc analysis, 218 women and 294 men were genotyped for 17 polymorphisms: TYMS (rs34743033, rs2853542, rs11280056), MTHFR (rs1801133, rs1801131), ERCC1 (rs11615), XRCC1 (rs25487), XRCC3 (rs861539), XPD (rs1799793, rs13181), GSTP1 (rs1695), GSTT1/GSTM1 (deletion +/-), ABCC1 (rs2074087), and ABCC2 (rs3740066, rs1885301, rs4148386). The aim was to assess the interaction between these polymorphisms and sex, on safety in terms of time to grade ≥3 haematological (TTH), grade ≥3 gastrointestinal (TTG) and grade ≥2 neurological (TTN) toxicity. Interactions were detected on TTH for rs1801133 and rs1799793, on TTG for rs13181 and on TTN for rs11615. Rs1799793 GA genotype (p = 0.006) and A allele (p = 0.009) shortened TTH in men. In women, the rs11615 CC genotype worsened TTN (co-dominant model p = 0.008, recessive model p = 0.003) and rs13181 G allele improved the TTG (p = 0.039). Differences between the two sexes in genotype distribution of rs1885301 (p = 0.020) and rs4148386 (p = 0.005) were found. We highlight that polymorphisms could be sex-specific biomarkers. These results, however, need to be confirmed in additional series.
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- 2020
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29. Eur J Cancer
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Carine Bellera, Atsuo Takashima, Julien Taieb, Benoit Rousseau, Thierry André, Roberto Labianca, Jeffrey A. Meyerhardt, Aimery de Gramont, James Paul, Axel Grothey, Alberto Sobrero, Cornelis J. A. Punt, Leonard B. Saltz, Franck Bonnetain, Qian Shi, Tetsuya Hamaguchi, Ioannis Souglakos, Sophie Gourgou, Takayuki Yoshino, Greg Yothers, Richard M. Goldberg, Ioannis Boukovinas, Dewi Vernerey, Steven R. Alberts, Aurélia Meurisse, Marc Ychou, Anna Dorothea Wagner, Sharlene Gill, Xavier Paoletti, Rachel Kerr, Marck P Saunders, Sara Lonardi, Manish A. Shah, Thomas Aparicio, Julie Henriques, Romain Cohen, Timothy Iveson, Hans-Joachim Schmoll, Oncology, CCA - Cancer Treatment and Quality of Life, Bordeaux population health (BPH), and Université de Bordeaux (UB)-Institut de Santé Publique, d'Épidémiologie et de Développement (ISPED)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)
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0301 basic medicine ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Endpoint Determination ,Colorectal cancer ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Guidelines as Topic ,Randomised controlled trials ,Guidelines ,Article ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Chemotherapy ,Adjuvant ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,Event (probability theory) ,End point ,business.industry ,Reproducibility of Results ,Cancer ,EPICENE ,medicine.disease ,Time-to-event end-points ,3. Good health ,Colon cancer ,Clinical trial ,030104 developmental biology ,Oncology ,Time to recurrence ,Research Design ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Colonic Neoplasms ,[SDV.SPEE]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Santé publique et épidémiologie ,business - Abstract
Background The variability of definitions for time-to-event (TTE) end-points impacts the conclusions of randomised clinical trials (RCTs). The Definition for the Assessment of Time-to-event Endpoints in CANcer (DATECAN) initiative aims to provide consensus definitions for TTE end-points used in RCTs. Here, we formulate guidelines for adjuvant colon cancer RCTs. Methods We performed a literature review to identify TTE end-points and events included in their definition in RCT publications. Then, a consensus was reached among a panel of international experts, using a formal modified Delphi method, with 2 rounds of questionnaires and an in-person meeting. Results Twenty-four experts scored 72 events involved in 6 TTE end-points. Consensus was reached for 24%, 57% and 100% events after the first round, second round and in-person meeting. For RCTs not using overall survival as their primary end-point, the experts recommend using disease-free survival (DFS) rather than recurrence-free survival (RFS) or time to recurrence (TTR) as the primary end-point. The consensus definition of DFS includes all causes of death, second primary colorectal cancers (CRCs), anastomotic relapse and metastatic relapse as an event, but not second primary non-CRCs. Events included in the RFS definition are the same as for DFS with the exception of second primary CRCs. The consensus definition of TTR includes anastomotic or metastatic relapse, death with evidence of recurrence and death from CC cause. Conclusion Standardised definitions of TTE end-points ensure the reproducibility of the end-points between RCTs and facilitate cross-trial comparisons. These definitions should be integrated in standard practice for the design, reporting and interpretation of adjuvant CC RCTs.
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- 2020
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30. Symptomatic COVID-19 in advanced-cancer patients treated with immune-checkpoint inhibitors. Prospective analysis from a multicentre observational trial by FICOG
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Vanja Vaccaro, Alessio Cortellini, Francesca Mazzoni, Carmine Pinto, Elena Verzoni, Vieri Scotti, Cinzia Baldessari, Ugo De Giorgi, Lucia Fratino, Sebastiano Buti, Francesco Verderame, Fausto Meriggi, Valentina Guadalupi, Francesco Di Costanzo, Saverio Cinieri, Giorgia Negrini, Stefania Gori, Pamela Guglielmini, Pasqualina Giordano, Mariella Sorarù, Davide Tassinari, Debora Pezzuolo, Francesco Carrozza, Lorenzo Calvetti, Claudia Mucciarini, Chiara Casadei, Sara Pilotto, Vincenzo Montesarchio, Massimo Di Maio, Evaristo Maiello, Nicola Battelli, Fable Zustovich, Alberto Clemente, Raffaele Giusti, Roberto Labianca, Simona Carnio, Giuseppe Fornarini, Mauro Iannopollo, Francesco Atzori, Paola Ermacora, Elisabetta Garzoli, Maria Banzi, Diana Giannarelli, Gaetano Lacidogna, Marco Filetti, Manlio Mencoboni, Lucia Longo, Angela Maria Dicorato, Diego Zara, Sandro Pignata, Claudio Verusio, Andrea Bonetti, Marcello Tiseo, Ernesto Rossi, Michele Tognetto, Marilena Di Napoli, Donata Sartori, Antonino Castro, Sergio Bracarda, Angela Gernone, Marco Maruzzo, Antonio Russo, Veronica Prati, Mimma Rizzo, Claudia Corbo, Alessandro Cappetta, Francesco Grossi, Paolo Andrea Zucali, Diego Signorelli, Fausto Barbieri, Antonello Veccia, Luigi Cavanna, and Melissa Bersanelli
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0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,immune-checkpoint inhibitors ,influenza-like illness ,lcsh:RC254-282 ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cancer immunotherapy ,Internal medicine ,Medicine ,Prospective cohort study ,Cancer staging ,Original Research ,Influenza-like illness ,business.industry ,SARS-CoV-2 ,virus diseases ,COVID-19 ,Immunotherapy ,cancer patients ,lcsh:Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,medicine.disease ,Comorbidity ,Vaccination ,030104 developmental biology ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Observational study ,business - Abstract
Background:This prospective, multicentre, observational INVIDIa-2 study is investigating the clinical efficacy of influenza vaccination in advanced-cancer patients receiving immune-checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs), enrolled in 82 Italian centres, from October 2019 to January 2020. The primary endpoint was the incidence of influenza-like illness (ILI) until 30 April 2020. All the ILI episodes, laboratory tests, complications, hospitalizations and pneumonitis were recorded. Therefore, the study prospectively recorded all the COVID-19 ILI events.Patients and methods:Patients were included in this non-prespecified COVID-19 analysis, if alive on 31 January 2020, when the Italian government declared the national emergency. The prevalence of confirmed COVID-19 cases was detected as ILI episode with laboratory confirmation of SARS-CoV-2. Cases with clinical-radiological diagnosis of COVID-19 (COVID-like ILIs), were also reported.Results:Out of 1257 enrolled patients, 955 matched the inclusion criteria for this unplanned analysis. From 31 January to 30 April 2020, 66 patients had ILI: 9 of 955 cases were confirmed COVID-19 ILIs, with prevalence of 0.9% [95% confidence interval (CI): 0.3–2.4], a hospitalization rate of 100% and a mortality rate of 77.8%. Including 5 COVID-like ILIs, the overall COVID-19 prevalence was 1.5% (95% CI: 0.5–3.1), with 100% hospitalization and 64% mortality. The presence of elderly, males and comorbidities was significantly higher among patients vaccinated against influenza versus unvaccinated ( p = 0.009, p Conclusion:COVID-19 has a meaningful clinical impact on the cancer-patient population receiving ICIs, with high prevalence, hospitalization and an alarming mortality rate among symptomatic cases. Influenza vaccination does not protect from SARS-CoV-2 infection.
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- 2020
31. Prognostic impact of early treatment discontinuation and early oxaliplatin discontinuation in patients treated with 6 months of oxaliplatin-based adjuvant chemotherapy for stage III colon cancer: an ACCENT/IDEA pooled analysis of 11 trials
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Claire Gallois, Qian Shi, Jeffrey P. Meyers, Timothy Iveson, Steven R Alberts, Aimery De Gramont, Alberto F. Sobrero, Daniel G. Haller, Eiji Oki, Anthony Frank Shields, Caroline Kelly, Ioannis Boukovinas, Roberto Labianca, Frank A. Sinicrope, Ioannis Sougklakos, Takayuki Yoshino, Jeffrey A. Meyerhardt, Thierry Andre, Demetris Papamichail, and Julien Taieb
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Cancer Research ,Oncology - Abstract
11 Background: Six months of oxaliplatin-based adjuvant chemotherapy in patients with stage III colon cancer (CC) remains a standard in high-risk stage III patients. Early treatment discontinuation (ETD) could worsen the prognosis. In addition, there is current lack of data on the prognostic impact of early oxaliplatin only discontinuation (EOD). Methods: We studied the prognostic impact of ETD and EOD in patients with stage III CC who participated in 11 relevant clinical trials of the ACCENT and IDEA databases, where patients were planned to receive 6 months of adjuvant fluoropyrimidine plus oxaliplatin (FOLFOX or CAPOX). ETD was defined as discontinuation of treatment before 75% of cycles of chemotherapy. EOD was defined as discontinuation of oxaliplatin only, while continuing the fluoropyrimidine, before 75% of cycles of oxaliplatin. Association between ETD/EOD and overall survival (OS) and disease-free survival (DFS) was assessed by Cox model adjusted for prognostic factors. Results: ETD analysis included 10,444 patients (FOLFOX n = 7,033; CAPOX n = 3,411), with 20.9% of patients with ETD (17.8% with FOLFOX and 27.2% with CAPOX, p < 0.001). Out of 7,243 patients, 18.8% experienced EOD (17.4% FOLFOX versus 21.4% with CAPOX, p < 0.001). Compared to patients without ETD or EOD, patients with ETD or EOD were statistically more likely to be women, older, with higher ECOG-PS ≥ 1, and in addition for ETD, a Body Mass Index (BMI) < 18.5 kg/m2. In multivariate analyses, ETD was associated with a decrease in DFS and OS in the overall population (HR: 1.40 95%CI 1.23-1.58, p < 0.001 and HR: 1.51 95%CI 1.31-1.74, p < 0.001, respectively). The same pattern was present with FOLFOX and CAPOX regimen, and also in low-risk and high-risk groups for each regimen with the exception of the CAPOX regimen in the low-risk group for DFS and OS. By contrast, EOD was not associated with reduced DFS or OS in the overall population (HR: 1.10 95%CI 0.77-1.58, p = 0.6 and HR: 0.97 95%CI 0.62-1.52, p = 0.9, respectively), in the low-risk group (HR: 0.97 95%CI 0.56-1.66, p = 0.9 and HR: 0.97 95%CI 0.51-1.82, p = 0.9, respectively) and high-risk group (HR: 1.22 95%CI 0.74-2.02, p = 0.4 and HR: 1.05 95%CI 0.53-2.08, p = 0.9, respectively) and for all subgroups of regimen. Conclusions: In patients treated with 6 months of oxaliplatin-based adjuvant chemotherapy for stage III CC, ETD was associated with a decrease in DFS and OS. By contrast, EOD was not significantly associated with poorer outcomes. In case of relevant neurotoxicity during a 6 months schedule, these data are not in favor of continuing oxaliplatin beyond 75% of planned cycles of adjuvant chemotherapy, and demonstrate that fluoropyrimidines remain the cornerstone of adjuvant chemotherapy in localized CC.
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- 2022
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32. FOLFOX or CAPOX in Stage II to III Colon Cancer: Efficacy Results of the Italian Three or Six Colon Adjuvant Trial
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Gerardo Rosati, A. Zaniboni, Evaristo Maiello, Maria Giulia Zampino, Nicoletta Pella, Maurizio Cantore, Sandro Barni, Sara Lonardi, Libero Ciuffreda, Monica Ronzoni, Daris Ferrari, Alberto Sobrero, Mario Scartozzi, Maria Di Bartolomeo, Maria Banzi, Felice Pasini, Eliana Rulli, Vittorina Zagonel, Paolo Marchetti, Roberto Labianca, and Lorenza Rimassa
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Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Organoplatinum Compounds ,Colorectal cancer ,Leucovorin ,Phases of clinical research ,Gastroenterology ,Disease-Free Survival ,Capecitabine ,03 medical and health sciences ,Folinic acid ,0302 clinical medicine ,FOLFOX ,Internal medicine ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,medicine ,Adjuvant therapy ,Humans ,Aged ,Neoplasm Staging ,business.industry ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Oxaliplatin ,Treatment Outcome ,030104 developmental biology ,Italy ,Oncology ,Chemotherapy, Adjuvant ,Fluorouracil ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Colonic Neoplasms ,Female ,Neoplasm Grading ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Purpose Given the cumulative neurotoxicity associated with oxaliplatin, a shorter duration of adjuvant therapy, if equally efficacious, would be advantageous for patients and health-care systems. Methods The Three or Six Colon Adjuvant trial is an open-label, phase III, multicenter, noninferiority trial randomizing patients with high-risk stage II or stage III colon cancer to receive 3 months or 6 months of FOLFOX (fluorouracil, leucovorin, and oxaliplatin) or CAPOX (capecitabine plus oxaliplatin). Primary end-point is relapse-free survival. Results 3,759 patients were accrued from 130 Italian sites, 64% receiving FOLFOX and 36% CAPOX. Two-thirds were stage III. The median time of follow up was 62 months and 772 relapses or deaths have been observed. The hazard ratio (HR) of the 3 months versus 6 months for relapse/death was 1.14 (95% CI, 0.99 to 1.32; P [for noninferiority] = .514) and the CI crossed the noninferiority limit of 1.20. However, the absolute difference in 3-year RFS was 1.9% (95% CI, -0.7% to 4.4%). Counter-intuitively, while the RFS curves were similar for stage III (HR, 1.07; 95% CI, 0.91 to 1.26) and for CAPOX treated patients (HR, 0.98; 95% CI, 0.77 to 1.26), they were not for stage II and for FOLFOX treated patients, with HR of 1.41 (95% CI, 1.05 to 1.89) and 1.23 (95% CI, 1.03 to 1.46), respectively, favoring the 6 months of treatment. Conclusion The Three or Six Colon Adjuvant trial failed to formally show noninferiority of 3 versus 6 months of treatment to the predefined margin of 20% relative increase. The results depended on the adjuvant regimen and risk. For CAPOX, 3 months were as good as 6 months; for FOLFOX, 6 months added extra benefit. Counter-intuitively, the low-risk patients benefitted more than the high-risk population from the 6-month duration. The choice of regimen and duration should depend on patient characteristics and be balanced against the extra toxicity of longer therapy.
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- 2018
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33. Duration of Adjuvant Chemotherapy for Stage III Colon Cancer
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Axel Grothey, Jeffrey P. Meyers, Mark P Saunders, Qian Shi, Lindsay A. Renfro, Ioannis Boukovinas, Dewi Vernerey, Toshiaki Watanabe, Takayuki Yoshino, Anthony F. Shields, Thierry André, Alberto Sobrero, Donna Niedzwiecki, Rachel Kerr, Julien Taieb, Timothy Iveson, Takeharu Yamanaka, John Souglakos, Jeffrey A. Meyerhardt, Roberto Labianca, James Paul, Daniel J. Sargent, and Valter Torri
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0301 basic medicine ,Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Article ,Capecitabine ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,FOLFOX ,Internal medicine ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,Adjuvant therapy ,Humans ,Medicine ,Neoplasm Staging ,Chemotherapy ,business.industry ,Hazard ratio ,General Medicine ,digestive system diseases ,Oxaliplatin ,Regimen ,030104 developmental biology ,Chemotherapy, Adjuvant ,Fluorouracil ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Colonic Neoplasms ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
BACKGROUND\ud Since 2004, a regimen of 6 months of treatment with oxaliplatin plus a fluoropyrimidine has been standard adjuvant therapy in patients with stage III colon cancer. However, since oxaliplatin is associated with cumulative neurotoxicity, a shorter duration of therapy could spare toxic effects and health expenditures.\ud \ud METHODS\ud We performed a prospective, preplanned, pooled analysis of six randomized, phase 3 trials that were conducted concurrently to evaluate the noninferiority of adjuvant therapy with either FOLFOX (fluorouracil, leucovorin, and oxaliplatin) or CAPOX (capecitabine and oxaliplatin) administered for 3 months, as compared with 6 months. The primary end point was the rate of disease-free survival at 3 years. Noninferiority of 3 months versus 6 months of therapy could be claimed if the upper limit of the two-sided 95% confidence interval of the hazard ratio did not exceed 1.12.\ud \ud RESULTS\ud After 3263 events of disease recurrence or death had been reported in 12,834 patients, the noninferiority of 3 months of treatment versus 6 months was not confirmed in the overall study population (hazard ratio, 1.07; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.00 to 1.15). Noninferiority of the shorter regimen was seen for CAPOX (hazard ratio, 0.95; 95% CI, 0.85 to 1.06) but not for FOLFOX (hazard ratio, 1.16; 95% CI, 1.06 to 1.26). In an exploratory analysis of the combined regimens, among the patients with T1, T2, or T3 and N1 cancers, 3 months of therapy was noninferior to 6 months, with a 3-year rate of disease-free survival of 83.1% and 83.3%, respectively (hazard ratio, 1.01; 95% CI, 0.90 to 1.12). Among patients with cancers that were classified as T4, N2, or both, the disease-free survival rate for a 6-month duration of therapy was superior to that for a 3-month duration (64.4% vs. 62.7%) for the combined treatments (hazard ratio, 1.12; 95% CI, 1.03 to 1.23; P=0.01 for superiority).\ud \ud CONCLUSIONS\ud Among patients with stage III colon cancer receiving adjuvant therapy with FOLFOX or CAPOX, noninferiority of 3 months of therapy, as compared with 6 months, was not confirmed in the overall population. However, in patients treated with CAPOX, 3 months of therapy was as effective as 6 months, particularly in the lower-risk subgroup. (Funded by the National Cancer Institute and others.)
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- 2018
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34. Consensus statement on mandatory measurements in pancreatic cancer trials (COMM-PACT) for systemic treatment of unresectable disease
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Eric Van Cutsem, Thierry Conroy, Stefan Boeck, Jean-Luc Van Laethem, Jordan Berlin, Johanna W. Wilmink, Teresa Macarulla, Michele Reni, Gael Deplanque, Helmut Friess, Jonathan H M van der Meer, L. Bengt van Rijssen, Philip A. Philip, Emil ter Veer, Takuji Okusaka, Uwe Pelzer, David Goldstein, Marc G. Besselink, Richard Herrmann, Chris Verslype, Roberto Labianca, Jens T. Siveke, Ian Chau, Olivier R. Busch, Marcel J. van der Poel, John P. Neoptolemos, Franck Bonnetain, Hanneke W. M. van Laarhoven, Bengt Glimelius, Eileen M. O'Reilly, Werner Scheithauer, Rosa M A Mali, and Martijn G.H. van Oijen
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0301 basic medicine ,Oncology ,Prognostic variable ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Consensus ,Delphi Technique ,Health Status ,Delphi method ,MEDLINE ,Medizin ,Pact ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,Pancreatic cancer ,medicine ,Humans ,Baseline (configuration management) ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,business.industry ,Confounding ,medicine.disease ,Data Accuracy ,Clinical trial ,Pancreatic Neoplasms ,030104 developmental biology ,Treatment Outcome ,Clinical Trials, Phase III as Topic ,Research Design ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,business ,Biomarkers - Abstract
Variations in the reporting of potentially confounding variables in studies investigating systemic treatments for unresectable pancreatic cancer pose challenges in drawing accurate comparisons between findings. In this Review, we establish the first international consensus on mandatory baseline and prognostic characteristics in future trials for the treatment of unresectable pancreatic cancer. We did a systematic literature search to find phase 3 trials investigating first-line systemic treatment for locally advanced or metastatic pancreatic cancer to identify baseline characteristics and prognostic variables. We created a structured overview showing the reporting frequencies of baseline characteristics and the prognostic relevance of identified variables. We used a modified Delphi panel of two rounds involving an international panel of 23 leading medical oncologists in the field of pancreatic cancer to develop a consensus on the various variables identified. In total, 39 randomised controlled trials that had data on 15 863 patients were included, of which 32 baseline characteristics and 26 prognostic characteristics were identified. After two consensus rounds, 23 baseline characteristics and 12 prognostic characteristics were designated as mandatory for future pancreatic cancer trials. The COnsensus statement on Mandatory Measurements in unresectable PAncreatic Cancer Trials (COMM-PACT) identifies a mandatory set of baseline and prognostic characteristics to allow adequate comparison of outcomes between pancreatic cancer studies.
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- 2018
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35. First-line FOLFIRI and bevacizumab in patients with advanced colorectal cancer prospectively stratified according to serum LDH: final results of the GISCAD (Italian Group for the Study of Digestive Tract Cancers) CENTRAL (ColorEctalavastiNTRiAlLdh) trial
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Vittorina Zagonel, Carla Codecà, Gerardo Rosati, Maria Giulia Zampino, Mario Scartozzi, Stefano Cascinu, Domenico Germano, Sara Lonardi, Bruno Daniele, Nicoletta Pella, Pietro Sozzi, Luigi Cavanna, M. Libertini, Riccardo Giampieri, Roberto Labianca, Alberto Zaniboni, Daris Ferrari, Marco Puzzoni, Giampieri, Riccardo, Puzzoni, Marco, Daniele, Bruno, Ferrari, Dari, Lonardi, Sara, Zaniboni, Alberto, Cavanna, Luigi, Rosati, Gerardo, Pella, Nicoletta, Zampino, Maria Giulia, Sozzi, Pietro, Germano, Domenico, Zagonel, Vittorina, Codecà, Carla, Libertini, Michela, Labianca, Roberto, Cascinu, Stefano, and Scartozzi, Mario
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0301 basic medicine ,Male ,Cancer Research ,predictive factors ,Colorectal cancer ,Leucovorin ,Angiogenesis Inhibitors ,Colorectal Neoplasm ,Gastroenterology ,predictive factor ,Basal (phylogenetics) ,0302 clinical medicine ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,Clinical endpoint ,80 and over ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,bevacizumab ,colorectal cancer ,LDH ,Adult ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Bevacizumab ,Camptothecin ,Colorectal Neoplasms ,Disease-Free Survival ,Female ,Fluorouracil ,Humans ,L-Lactate Dehydrogenase ,Middle Aged ,Treatment Outcome ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,FOLFIRI ,medicine.drug ,Angiogenesis Inhibitor ,Human ,medicine.medical_specialty ,03 medical and health sciences ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocol ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Clinical trial ,Prospective Studie ,030104 developmental biology ,Clinical Study ,business - Abstract
Background: Previous findings suggested that bevacizumab might be able to improve response rate (RR) in colorectal cancer patients with high lactic dehydrogenase (LDH) basal levels. Methods: We conducted a phase II trial to prospectively ascertain whether bevacizumab in combination with FOLFIRI could have an improved clinical activity in patients with high LDH serum levels. Primary end point of the study was RR; secondary end points were median overall survival and median progression-free survival (mPFS). Results: A total of 81 patients were enrolled. No difference in terms of ORR (39% vs 31% for low vs high LDH level stratum, P=0.78) and mPFS (14.16 vs 10.29 months, HR: 1.07, 95% CI: 0.51–2.24, P=0.83) between the strata was observed, whereas overall survival (OS) was significantly longer for patients with low LDH (24.85 vs 15.14 months, HR: 4.08, 95% CI: 1.14–14.61, P=0.0004). In a not-pre-planned exploratory analysis using different cut-off ranges for LDH, we observed RR up to 70%, with no improvement in progression-free survival or OS. Conclusions: The CENTRAL trial failed to demonstrate that high LDH levels were related to a significantly improved RR in patients receiving first-line FOLFIRI and bevacizumab. The LDH serum levels should then no further be investigated as a predictive factor in this setting.
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- 2017
36. A need to simplify informed consent documents in cancer clinical trials. A position paper of the ARCAD Group
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Cathy Eng, G. Decoster, H.-J. Schmoll, Al B. Benson, Annette K. Larsen, Alberto Sobrero, A. de Gramont, Charles S. Fuchs, Harry Bleiberg, Masashi Fujii, John Zalcberg, Jean-Yves Douillard, Dominique Sprumont, Roberto Labianca, Edith P. Mitchell, Ph. Rougier, and Benoist Chibaudel
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Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice ,medicine.medical_specialty ,good clinical practice ,media_common.quotation_subject ,education ,Legibility ,Institution Review Board ,Consent Forms ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Documentation ,Informed consent ,Neoplasms ,inform consent ,Humans ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Patient participation ,media_common ,Clinical Trials as Topic ,Medical education ,Informed Consent ,business.industry ,clinical trial ,Hematology ,ethics ,Cancérologie ,Clinical trial ,Editor's Choice ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Family medicine ,oncology ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,Good clinical practice ,Special Articles ,Position paper ,Patient Participation ,business ,Autonomy ,Hématologie - Abstract
Background: In respect of the principle of autonomy and the right of self-determination, obtaining an informed consent of potential participants before their inclusion in a study is a fundamental ethical obligation. The variations in national laws, regulations, and cultures contribute to complex informed consent documents for patients participating in clinical trials. Currently, only few ethics committees seem willing to address the complexity and the length of these documents and to request investigators and sponsors to revise them in a way to make them understandable for potential participants. The purpose of this work is to focus on the written information in the informed consent documentation for drug development clinical trials and suggests (i) to distinguish between necessary and not essential information, (ii) to define the optimal format allowing the best legibility of those documents., SCOPUS: ar.j, info:eu-repo/semantics/published
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- 2017
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37. Borderline resectable pancreatic cancer: More than an anatomical concept
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Alessandro Inno, Giscad, Antonio Ghidini, Michele Reni, Stefano Cascinu, Sandro Barni, Massimo Falconi, Roberto Labianca, Fausto Petrelli, Petrelli, F., Inno, A., Barni, S., Ghidini, A., Labianca, R., Falconi, M., Reni, M., and Cascinu, S.
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medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Disease ,Borderline resectable ,03 medical and health sciences ,Pancreatectomy ,0302 clinical medicine ,Pancreatic cancer ,Humans ,Medicine ,Radical surgery ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,Hepatology ,business.industry ,General surgery ,Tumor shrinkage ,Gastroenterology ,Margins of Excision ,Prognosis ,medicine.disease ,Neoadjuvant Therapy ,Treatment ,Pancreatic Neoplasms ,Clinical trial ,Clinical Practice ,Radiation therapy ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,business - Abstract
Borderline resectable pancreatic cancer (BRPC) accounts for about 10–15% of newly diagnosed pancreatic cancer, and its management requires a skilled multidisciplinary team. The main definition of BRPC refers to resectability, but also a high risk of positive surgical margins and recurrence. This raises questions about the value of surgery and suggests an opportunity to utilize preoperative treatment in this subset of patients. Besides technical borderline resectable disease which is defined on anatomical and radiological criteria, there is also a biological borderline resectable disease which is defined on clinical and biological prognostic factors. Technical borderline resectable disease requires tumor shrinkage with aggressive therapy including modern drug combinations +/− radiotherapy to achieve radical surgery. Biological BRPC needs always an early systemic treatment in order to select the best candidates for subsequent radical surgery. It is important to distinguish between these different clinical scenarios, both in clinical practice and for clinical trials design.
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- 2017
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38. Thrombin generation predicts early recurrence in breast cancer patients
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Marina Marchetti, Cinzia Giaccherini, Giovanna Masci, Cristina Verzeroli, Laura Russo, Luigi Celio, Roberta Sarmiento, Sara Gamba, Carmen J. Tartari, Erika Diani, Alfonso Vignoli, Paolo Malighetti, Daniele Spinelli, Nicole M. Kuderer, Federico Nichetti, Mauro Minelli, Carlo Tondini, Sandro Barni, Francesco Giuliani, Fausto Petrelli, Andrea D’Alessio, Giampietro Gasparini, Roberto Labianca, Armando Santoro, Filippo De Braud, Anna Falanga, Francesca Schieppati, Antonia Martinetti, Elisabetta Gennaro, Mara Ghilardi, Marchetti, M, Giaccherini, C, Masci, G, Verzeroli, C, Russo, L, Celio, L, Sarmiento, R, Gamba, S, Tartari, C, Diani, E, Vignoli, A, Malighetti, P, Spinelli, D, Kuderer, N, Nichetti, F, Tondini, C, Barni, S, Giuliani, F, Petrelli, F, D'Alessio, A, Gasparini, G, Labianca, R, Santoro, A, De Braud, F, Falanga, A, and Hypercan, I
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Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Multivariate analysis ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Breast Neoplasms ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,disease recurrence ,03 medical and health sciences ,Breast cancer ,0302 clinical medicine ,risk model ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Derivation ,Prospective Studies ,Mastectomy ,Proportional hazards model ,business.industry ,breast cancer ,hypercoagulability ,thrombin generation ,Thrombin ,Cancer ,Hematology ,Settore ING-IND/35 - Ingegneria Economico-Gestionale ,medicine.disease ,Prognosis ,Cohort ,Neoplasm Recurrence, Local ,business ,Risk assessment - Abstract
Background: Cancer patients present with a hypercoagulable state often associated with poor disease prognosis. Objectives: This study aims to evaluate whether thrombin generation (TG), a global coagulation test, may be a useful tool to improve the identification of patients at high risk of early disease recurrence (i.e. E-DR within 2 years) after breast cancer surgery. Patients/methods: A cohort of 522 newly diagnosed patients with surgically resected high-risk breast cancer were enrolled in the ongoing prospective HYPERCAN study. TG potential was measured in plasma samples collected before starting systemic chemotherapy. Significant predictive hemostatic and clinic-pathological parameters were identified in the derivation cohort by Cox-regression analysis. A risk prognostic score for E-DR was generated in the derivation and tested in the validation cohort. Results: After a median observation period of 3.4 years, DR occurred in 51 patients, 28 of whom were E-DR. E-DR subjects presented with the highest TG values as compared to both late-DR (from 2 to 5 years) and no relapse subjects (p
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- 2019
39. Khorana score and thromboembolic risk in stage II-III colorectal cancer patients: a
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Francesca Galli, Nicola Silvestris, A. Ciarlo, Daris Ferrari, Mauro Moroni, E. Piazza, Fabrizio Artioli, Sabino De Placido, Lorenzo Pavesi, Paolo Bidoli, F. Galli, Alberto Sobrero, Roberto Labianca, Gerardo Rosati, Fausto Petrelli, Angela Buonadonna, Gian Luca Frassineti, Sara Lonardi, Lorenza Rimassa, Sandro Barni, Katia Fiorella Dotti, Mario Clerico, Nicoletta Pella, Maria Banzi, Massimo Aglietta, Maria Giulia Zampino, Vincenzo Rosario Iaffaioli, Evaristo Maiello, Paolo Marchetti, Paolo Giordani, Alberto Zaniboni, Barni, Sandro, Rosati, Gerardo, Lonardi, Sara, Pella, Nicoletta, Banzi, Maria, Zampino, Maria G, Dotti, Katia F, Rimassa, Lorenza, Marchetti, Paolo, Maiello, Evaristo, Artioli, Fabrizio, Ferrari, Dari, Labianca, Roberto, Bidoli, Paolo, Zaniboni, Alberto, Sobrero, Alberto, Iaffaioli, Vincenzo, De Placido, Sabino, Frassineti, Gian Luca, Ciarlo, Andrea, Buonadonna, Angela, Silvestris, Nicola, Piazza, Elena, Pavesi, Lorenzo, Moroni, Mauro, Clerico, Mario, Aglietta, Massimo, Giordani, Paolo, Galli, Francesca, Galli, Fabio, Petrelli, Fausto, Barni, S, Rosati, G, Lonardi, S, Pella, N, Banzi, M, Zampino, M, Dotti, K, Rimassa, L, Marchetti, P, Maiello, E, Artioli, F, Ferrari, D, Labianca, R, Bidoli, P, Zaniboni, A, Sobrero, A, Iaffaioli, V, De Placido, S, Frassineti, G, Ciarlo, A, Buonadonna, A, Silvestris, N, Piazza, E, Pavesi, L, Moroni, M, Clerico, M, Aglietta, M, Giordani, P, Galli, F, and Petrelli, F
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Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Colorectal cancer ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Phases of clinical research ,Khorana score ,colorectal cancer ,lcsh:RC254-282 ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Internal medicine ,Post-hoc analysis ,adjuvant chemotherapy ,thrombosis ,medicine ,thrombosi ,Original Research ,Cancer staging ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,lcsh:Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,Thrombosis ,Adjuvant chemotherapy ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Adjuvant chemotherapy, colorectal cancer, Khorana score, thrombosis ,business ,Risk assessment ,Corrigendum ,Adjuvant ,030215 immunology - Abstract
Background: The risk of venous thromboembolic events (VTE) during adjuvant chemotherapy for colorectal cancer (CRC) is unknown. We aim to evaluate if the Khorana score (KS) can predict this risk, and if it represents a prognostic factor for overall survival (OS) through a post hoc analysis of the phase III TOSCA trial of different durations (3- versus 6-months) of adjuvant chemotherapy. Methods: A logistic regression model was used to test the associations between the risk of VTE and the KS. The results are expressed as odds ratios (OR) with 95% confidence intervals (95% CI). To assess the effect of the KS on OS, multivariable analyses using Cox regression models were performed. The results are expressed as hazard ratios (HR) with 95% CI. Results: Among 1380 CRC patients with available data, the VTE risk ( n = 72 events: 5.2%) was similar in the two duration arms (5.5% versus 4.9%), with 0.2% of patients belonging to the high-risk KS group. Rates of VTE were similar in the low- and intermediate-risk groups (4.8% versus 6.4%). KS did not represent an independent predictive factor for VTE occurrence. Chemotherapy duration was not associated with VTE risk. In addition, KS was not prognostic for OS in multivariate analysis (HR: 0.92, 95% CI, 0.63–1.36; p = 0.6835). Conclusions: The use of the KS did not predict VTEs in a low–moderate thromboembolic risk population as CRC. These data did not support the use of KS to predict VTE during adjuvant chemotherapy, and suggest that other risk assessment models should be researched.
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- 2019
40. Treatment of venous thromboembolism with tinzaparin in oncological patients
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Davide Imberti, Marcello Di Nisio, Lorenzo G. Mantovani, Walter Ageno, Roberto Labianca, Sandro Barni, Anna Falanga, Ageno, W, Barni, S, Di Nisio, M, Falanga, A, Imberti, D, Labianca, R, and Mantovani, L
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Anticoagulants ,Heparin, Low-Molecular-Weight ,Humans ,Neoplasms ,Tinzaparin ,Venous Thromboembolism ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cancer associated thrombosis ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,In patient ,Secondary prevention ,business.industry ,Heparin ,Gold standard ,Low-Molecular-Weight ,Cancer ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Thrombosis ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,business ,Venous thromboembolism ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Venous thromboembolism (VTE) is a major cause of morbidity and mortality in patients with cancer. For over a decade, the gold standard of treatment and secondary prevention of cancer-associated thrombosis (CAT) has been represented by low-molecular-weight heparins (LMWHs), which are currently recommended as the first-line treatment for CAT. Among the LMWHs that were more extensively tested in patients with CAT, tinzaparin is a LMWH produced by the enzymatic degradation of porcine-derived unfractionated heparin. The efficacy of tinzaparin in this setting is supported by well-grounded evidence. However, there is a need to discuss the positioning of tinzaparin in the continuously evolving treatment scenario of VTE therapy in cancer patients. In this paper, which was developed by a group of clinicians with wide experience in the treatment of VTE in cancer patients, we discuss the current therapeutic options and the role of tinzaparin for the treatment of CAT.
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- 2019
41. Early-onset stage II/III colorectal adenocarcinoma in the IDEA database: Treatment adherence, toxicities, and outcomes from adjuvant fluoropyrimidine and oxaliplatin
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Takayuki Yoshino, Qian Shi, Andrea Harkin, Irit Ben-Aharon, Julien Taieb, Takeharu Yamanaka, Jeffrey A. Meyerhardt, Timothy Iveson, Florian Lordick, Ioannis Souglakos, Elisa Fontana, Adolescent, Anthony F. Shields, Thierry André, Roberto Labianca, Elizabeth C Smyth, Markus Moehler, Axel Grothey, Jeffrey P. Meyers, Alberto Sobrero, and Ioannis Boukovinas
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Oncology ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Treatment adherence ,business.industry ,Colorectal cancer ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Stage ii ,medicine.disease ,Oxaliplatin ,Regimen ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Colorectal adenocarcinoma ,business ,Adjuvant ,medicine.drug - Abstract
3517 Background: Incidence of early-onset colorectal cancer (eoCRC, age < 50) is steadily increasing. Decisions on adjuvant treatment (adjTx) regimen and duration should consider tx adherence, toxicity (tox) and expected outcomes in a population with life-expectancy longer than late onset CRC (loCRC, age ≥ 50). Methods: Individual patient data from stage II/III patients (pts) from 6 randomised trials in the IDEA database were used to compare characteristics, tx adherence, and adverse events of eoCRC to loCRC. To reduce the confounder of non-cancer-related deaths due to age/co-morbidities, time-to-recurrence (TTR) and cancer-specific survival (CSS) were compared by stratified Gay k-sample test. 5-year cancer-specific mortality (CSM) rate were estimated by adjusted cumulative incidence function. 3-year relapse-free survival (RFS) rate were compared by stratified and adjusted COX models. Results: Out of 16,349 pts included, 1564 (9.6%) were eoCRC. Compared to loCRC, eoCRC had lower percent of male pts (51% vs 57%, p < 0.01) better performance status (PS0 86% vs 80%, p < 0.01), similar T stage distribution (% T1-3/T4: 76/24 vs 77/23, p = 0.97), higher rate of N2 disease (24% vs 22%, p < 0.01), more likely to complete pre-planned duration of adjTx (83.2% vs 78.2%, p < 0.01) and received a higher tx intensity especially with 6 month tx (mean oxaliplatin dose intensity 75% vs 72%, p < 0.01; capecitabine 85% vs 78%, p < 0.01; 5FU 85% vs 82% p < 0.01). Gastrointestinal tox was more common in eoCRC (any grade nausea 58% vs 45%, p < 0.01; any grade vomiting 22% vs 16%, p < 0.01); haematological tox was more frequent in loCRC (62% vs, 69%, p = < 0.01); any grade neuropathy rate was similar (75%). Significant interaction was found between age and T stage for TTR (p = 0.04). Clinical outcome estimates and comparisons are shown in Table. Notably, high risk stage III (T4/N2) eoCRC had significantly lower 3-y RFS rate (54% vs 64%, HRadj 0.74, p < 0.01). Conclusions: eoCRC have better tx adherence than loCRC, as expected. While in high risk stage II and low risk stage III, cancer-specific outcomes are not different, in high risk stage III young age is negatively prognostic and associated with significantly higher relapse rate and risk of CRC death; this is despite a higher administered adjTx-intensity, suggesting a more aggressive disease biology. Clinical trial information: NCT00749450 (SCOT); NCT00646607 (TOSCA); NCT01150045 (CALGB/SWOG 80702); NCT00958737 (IDEA France) [Table: see text]
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- 2021
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42. Thrombin Generation and D-Dimer Significantly Predict for Early Disease Progression and Mortality in Patients with Gastrointestinal Cancer
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Carmen J Tartari, Andrea D'Alessio, Roberto Labianca, Laura Russo, Carlo Tondini, Marina Marchetti, Anna Falanga, Erika Diani, Giovanna Masci, Sandro Barni, Alfonso Vignoli, Cinzia Giaccherini, Sara Gamba, Filippo de Braud, Cristina Verzeroli, Marina Pesenti, Nadia Fj Schillaci, Francesco Giuliani, Armando Santoro, Fausto Petrelli, Luigi Celio, Roberta Sarmiento, Patricia Gomez-Rosas, Giampietro Gasparini, and Silvia Bolognini
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Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Chemotherapy ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Immunology ,Cancer ,Cell Biology ,Hematology ,medicine.disease ,Biochemistry ,Thrombin generation ,Internal medicine ,Cohort ,D-dimer ,medicine ,Coagulation testing ,Gastrointestinal cancer ,Prospective cohort study ,business - Abstract
Background: Abnormalities of laboratory coagulation tests are common in cancer patients, underlying a subclinical hypercoagulable state. Due to the reciprocal interaction between coagulation and cancer, the biomarkers of hemostatic system activation are under evaluation as a tool for predicting cancer outcomes, disease progression, and mortality. Aim: In this analysis of a prospective cohort of patients with newly diagnosed metastatic gastro-intestinal (GI) cancer, we wanted to evaluate whether the pre-chemotherapy abnormalities of hemostatic biomarkers may predict for early-disease progression (E-DP), i.e. within 6 months from cancer diagnosis, and for 1-year overall survival (1-year OS). Methods: The study cohort included 304 newly diagnosed metastatic GI cancer patients, candidate to chemotherapy associated or not with immunotherapy, enrolled from March 2012 to March 2019 in the HYPERCAN study (ClinicalTrials.gov, ID# NCT02622815), an ongoing Italian prospective, multicenter, observational study; 191 healthy subjects acted as a control group. At diagnosis, before starting any curative chemotherapy, plasma samples were collected and tested for the following hypercoagulation biomarkers: D-dimer and fibrinogen by an automated coagulometer analyzer (ACL TOP500, Werfen Group), and prothrombin fragment 1+2 (F1+2) by ELISA (Siemens). In addition, thrombin generation (TG) potential was evaluated by Calibrated Automated Thrombogram (CAT) assay at 5 pM tissue factor and endogenous thrombin potential (TG ETP) and TG peak were analyzed. Clinical data [i.e. age, sex, BMI, ECOG Performance Status (ECOG-PS), relevant comorbidies] and the hemochromocytometric parameters were recorded at enrollment, whereas E-DP was clinically monitored every 3 chemotherapy cycles and during follow-up. Results: A cohort of 304 (205M/99F) metastatic GI cancer patients (206 colorectal and 98 gastric cancers) with a median age of 66 years (min-max: 29-85) was available for analysis. At enrollment, patients presented with a hypercoagulable state, as shown by significantly higher (p1 (HR=3.858), and chemotherapy plus immunotherapy treatment (HR=2.274). Conclusion: Our results show that, in newly diagnosed metastatic gastrointestinal cancer patients, before the start of antitumor treatment, a procoagulant state exists. Among the different hemostatic parameters evaluated, D-dimer and TG ETP appear as candidate biomarkers to predict for 6-month DP and 1-year OS. In particular, in this setting, the role of TG as a prognostic biomarker emerges for the first time in a large prospective cohort of GI cancer patients. Project funded by "5xMILLE" n. 12237 grant from the "Italian Association for Cancer Research (AIRC)" Disclosures Santoro: Bristol-Myers Squibb, SERVIER, Gilead Sciences, Pfizer, Eisai, Bayer, MSD, Sanofi, ArQule: Consultancy; Arqule, Sanofi: Consultancy; Takeda, Roche, Abbvie, Amgen, Celgene, AstraZeneca, ArQule, Lilly, Sandoz, Novartis, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Servier, Gilead Sciences, Pfizer, Eisai, Bayer, MSD: Speakers Bureau; Takeda, Roche, Abbvie, Amgen, Celgene, AstraZeneca, ArQule, Lilly, Sandoz, Novartis, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Servier, Gilead Sciences, Pfizer, Eisai, Bayer, MSD: Speakers Bureau; Bristol Myers Squibb, Servier, Gilead, Pfizer, Eisai, Bayer, MSD: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Bristol-Myers Squibb, SERVIER, Gilead Sciences, Pfizer, Eisai, Bayer, MSD, Sanofi, ArQule: Consultancy, Speakers Bureau; Bristol-Myers Squibb, SERVIER, Gilead Sciences, Pfizer, Eisai, Bayer, MSD, Sanofi, ArQule: Consultancy.
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- 2020
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43. Abstract CT263: Post-surgical liquid biopsy-guided treatment of stage III and high-risk stage II colon cancer patients: The PEGASUS trial
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Luca Lazzari, Andrea Sartore-Bianchi, Andrés Cervantes, Alberto Sobrero, Salvatore Siena, Noelia Tarazona, Alberto Bardelli, Sara Lonardi, Silvia Marsoni, Stefania Sciallero, Elena Elez, Paolo Luraghi, Valter Torri, Matteo Fassan, Maria Giulia Zampino, Filippo Pietrantonio, Susana Muñoz, Enzo Medico, Livio Trusolino, Josep Tabernero, Stefania Mosconi, Clara Montagut, Maria Rescigno, and Roberto Labianca
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Oncology ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Colorectal cancer ,Population ,Cancer ,Retrospective cohort study ,medicine.disease ,Capecitabine ,Internal medicine ,FOLFIRI ,Medicine ,Liquid biopsy ,Stage (cooking) ,business ,education ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background: Moving stage III Colon Cancer (CC) into the precision medicine space is a priority in view of the lack of molecular markers driving adjuvant treatment. Retrospective studies have demonstrated the tremendous prognostic impact of circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) analysis after curative intent surgery, and suggested that lack of conversion of ctDNA from detectable to undetectable after adjuvant chemotherapy reflects treatment failure. With these premises, we have designed the PEGASUS trial (EudraCT 2019-002074-32) to prove the feasibility of using liquid biopsy to guide the post-surgical and post-adjuvant clinical management of early colon cancer patients. Methods: PEGASUS is a prospective multicentric vanguard study designed to test the feasibility of performing serial interventional liquid biopsies (LB) for ctDNA determination in 140 microsatellite stable Stage-III and T4N0 Stage-II CC patients. The LUNAR1 (Guardant Health, Redwood City, CA, USA) will be used for ctDNA determination. For the efficacy analysis, the PEGASUS cohort will be compared with a cohort of 420 patients from the TOSCA trial (NCT00646607) population matched 3:1 for all known prognostic phenotypes. A post-surgical LB executed 2-4 weeks after surgery will guide a “Molecular Adjuvant” treatment as follows: i) ctDNA+ patients will receive CAPOX for 3 months and ii) ctDNA- patients will receive capecitabine (CAPE) for 6 months but will be retested after 1 cycle, and if found ctDNA+ will be switched to CAPOX treatment. Immediately after the end of “Molecular Adjuvant” treatment a further LB will be performed and instruct subsequent treatment. Positive patients (ctDNA+/+ and ctDNA-/+) will receive an up-scaled “Molecular Metastatic” systemic treatment for 6 months or until radiological progression or toxicity as follows: i) ctDNA+/+ patients will be treated with FOLFIRI; ii) ctDNA-/+ patients with CAPOX. These patients will be subjected to a LB after 3 months and at the end of treatment and in case of positivity will be switched to FOLFIRI. Patients experiencing ctDNA conversion to negative (ctDNA+/-) will receive a de-escalated treatment with CAPE for 3 months. 3 LB will be performed within 3 months and in case of positivity the patient will be switched to FOLFIRI. Patients with ctDNA-/- will be subjected to an interventional follow-up comprising 2 further LB and in case of positivity they will be switched to CAPOX treatment. PEGASUS is piggybacked to AlfaOmega (NCT04120935), a Master Observational Protocol that will follow patients from diagnosis to 5 years or recurrence/death (whichever comes first), collecting clinical data, radio images and biological samples. AlfaOmega provides a clinical and logistic ecosystem for the seamless integration of PEGASUS clinical results with the biological underpinning of colon cancer. Citation Format: Elena Elez, Filippo Pietrantonio, Andrea Sartore-Bianchi, Clara Montagut, Andres Cervantes, Stefania Sciallero, Maria Giulia Zampino, Stefania Mosconi, Valter Torri, Noelia Tarazona, Luca Lazzari, Paolo Luraghi, Susana Muñoz, Matteo Fassan, Enzo Medico, Livio Trusolino, Maria Rescigno, Salvatore Siena, Alberto Sobrero, Roberto Labianca, Josep Tabernero, Alberto Bardelli, Sara Lonardi, Silvia Marsoni. Post-surgical liquid biopsy-guided treatment of stage III and high-risk stage II colon cancer patients: The PEGASUS trial [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research 2020; 2020 Apr 27-28 and Jun 22-24. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2020;80(16 Suppl):Abstract nr CT263.
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- 2020
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44. Risk-Benefit Comparisons Between Shorter and Longer Durations of Adjuvant Chemotherapy in High-Risk Stage II Colorectal Cancer—Reply
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Roberto Labianca, Fausto Petrelli, and Alberto Zaniboni
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Oncology ,Cancer Research ,2019-20 coronavirus outbreak ,Chemotherapy ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Adjuvant chemotherapy ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) ,MEDLINE ,Stage II Colorectal Cancer ,General Medicine ,Chemotherapy, Adjuvant ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Colorectal Neoplasms ,business ,Adjuvant - Published
- 2020
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45. The PEGASUS trial: Post-surgical liquid biopsy-guided treatment of stage III and high-risk stage II colon cancer patients
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Salvatore Siena, Luca Lazzari, Paolo Luraghi, Susana Muñoz, Noelia Tarazona, Silvia Marsoni, Elena Elez, Stefania Mosconi, Alberto Bardelli, Stefania Sciallero, Valter Torri, Roberto Labianca, Alberto Sobrero, Josep Tabernero, M. Giulia Zampino, Filippo Pietrantonio, Clara Montagut, Andrea Sartore-Bianchi, and Sara Lonardi
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Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Post surgical ,business.industry ,Retrospective cohort study ,Precision medicine ,Stage III Colon Cancer ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,medicine ,Radiology ,Stage (cooking) ,Liquid biopsy ,business ,Stage ii colon cancer ,030215 immunology - Abstract
TPS4124 Background: Moving stage III Colon Cancer (CC) into the precision medicine space is a priority in view of the lack of molecular markers driving adjuvant treatment. Retrospective studies have demonstrated the tremendous prognostic impact of circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) analysis after curative intent surgery, and suggested that lack of conversion of ctDNA from detectable to undetectable after adjuvant chemotherapy reflects treatment failure. With these premises, we have designed the PEGASUS trial (NCT04259944). Methods: PEGASUS is a prospective multicentric study designed to prove the feasibility of using liquid biopsy (LB) to guide the post-surgical and post-adjuvant clinical management in 140 microsatellite stable Stage-III and T4N0 Stage-II CC patients. The LUNAR1 test (Guardant Health, Redwood City, CA, USA) will be used for ctDNA determination. For the efficacy analysis, the PEGASUS cohort will be compared with a 3:1 matched cohort of 420 patients from the TOSCA trial (NCT00646607). A LB executed 2-4 weeks post-surgery will guide a “Molecular Adjuvant” treatment: i) ctDNA+ patients will receive CAPOX for 3 months and ii) ctDNA- patients will receive capecitabine (CAPE) for 6 months but will be retested after 1 cycle, and if found ctDNA+ will be switched to CAPOX treatment. At the end of the “Molecular Adjuvant” treatment a further LB will be performed and instruct subsequent treatment. Positive patients (ctDNA+/+ and ctDNA-/+) will receive an up-scaled “Molecular Metastatic” systemic treatment for 6 months or until radiological progression or toxicity: i) ctDNA+/+ patients will be treated with FOLFIRI; ii) ctDNA-/+ patients with CAPOX. These patients will be subjected to a LB after 3 months and at the end of treatment: in case of positivity will be switched to FOLFIRI. ctDNA+/- patientswill receive a de-escalated treatment with CAPE for 3 months. 3 LB will be performed within 3 months and in case of positivity the patient will be switched to FOLFIRI. Patients with ctDNA-/- will be subjected to an interventional follow-up comprising 2 further LB and in case of positivity they will be switched to CAPOX treatment. PEGASUS is piggybacked to AlfaOmega (NCT04120935), a Master Observational Protocol that will follow patients from diagnosis to 5 years or recurrence/death (whichever comes first), collecting clinical data, radio-images and biological samples. AlfaOmega provides a clinical and logistic ecosystem for the seamless integration of PEGASUS clinical results with the biological underpinning of colon cancer. Clinical trial information: NCT04259944 .
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- 2020
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46. Overall survival (OS) and long-term disease-free survival (DFS) of three versus six months of adjuvant (adj) oxaliplatin and fluoropyrimidine-based therapy for patients (pts) with stage III colon cancer (CC): Final results from the IDEA (International Duration Evaluation of Adj chemotherapy) collaboration
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Eiji Oki, Vassilis Georgoulias, Ioannis Boukovinas, Julien Taieb, Takeharu Yamanaka, Takayuki Yoshino, Andrea Harkin, Axel Grothey, Timothy Iveson, Jeffrey P. Meyers, Anthony F. Shields, Alberto Sobrero, Roberto Labianca, Mark P Saunders, Thierry André, Qian Shi, Jeffrey A. Meyerhardt, Dewi Vernerey, Valter Torri, and Ioannis Sougklakos
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Oncology ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Chemotherapy ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Population ,Oxaliplatin ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,FOLFOX ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Overall survival ,Stage (cooking) ,business ,Distributed File System ,education ,Adjuvant ,030215 immunology ,medicine.drug - Abstract
4004 Background: In overall population, IDEA pooled analysis did not demonstrate non-inferiority (NI) regarding 3y DFS in pts with stage III CC receiving 3m vs. 6m of adj FOLFOX/CAPOX. However, in pts treated with CAPOX (especially in low-risk pts), 3m of therapy was as effective as 6m. Results of OS and 5y DFS are reported. Methods: OS was defined as time from enrollment to death due to all causes. OS NI margin was conservatively set to be Hazard Ratio (HR) = 1.11, which is equivalent to: the maximum acceptable loss of OS efficacy, by shortening treatment to 3m, was half of the OS efficacy gained in MOSAIC trial (i.e., 2.26% absolute reduction in 5y OS rate). Pre-planned sub-group analyses included by regimen and risk group for both OS and 5y DFS. NI was to be declared if the one-sided false discovery rate adjusted (FDRa) NI p-value < 0.025. Results: With an overall median survival follow-up of 72 m (range per study, 62 to 84 m), 2584 deaths and 3777 DFS events among 12,835 pts from six trials were observed. Across 6 studies, 39.5% of pts received CAPOX (rate by study, 0% to 75.1%). Overall, the 5y OS rate was 82.4% (3m) and 82.8% (6m), with estimated OS HR of 1.02 (95% confidence interval [CI], 0.95-1.11; FDRa NI p, 0.058) and absolute 5-y OS rate difference of -0.4% (95% CI, -2.1 to 1.3%). Overall, the 5y DFS rate was 69.1% (3m) and 70.8% (6m), with estimated DFS HR of 1.08 (95%CI, 1.01-1.15, FDRa NI p, 0.22). HRs (95% CI) within subgroups see table. Conclusions: 5y OS rate reported in IDEA trials was higher than historical rates, regardless of duration of therapy. While overall survival in IDEA did not meet prior statistical assumptions for NI in overall population, the 0.4% difference in 5y OS should be placed in clinical context. OS and 5y DFS results continue to support the use of 3m adjuvant CAPOX for the vast majority of stage III colon cancer pts. This conclusion is strengthened by the substantial reduction of toxicities, inconveniencies and cost associated with shorter treatment duration. Clinical trial information: NCT01150045; 2009-010384-16; NCT00749450; ISRCTN59757862; 2007-003957-10; UMIN000008543; 2007-000354 . [Table: see text]
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- 2020
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47. Impact of Metformin Use and Diabetic Status During Adjuvant Fluoropyrimidine-Oxaliplatin Chemotherapy on the Outcome of Patients with Resected Colon Cancer: A TOSCA Study Subanalysis
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Vincenzo Adamo, Sabino De Placido, Luigi Cavanna, Evaristo Maiello, Sandro Barni, Francesca Galli, Claudio Vernieri, M. Nicolini, Massimo Aglietta, Sara Lonardi, Maria Di Bartolomeo, Laura Ferrari, Emiliano Tamburini, Azzurra Damiani, Maria Giulia Zampino, Rosario Vincenzo Iaffaioli, Francesco Leonardi, Gerardo Rosati, Katia Fiorella Dotti, F. Galli, Paolo Marchetti, Paolo Giordani, Giovanni Lo Re, Alberto Zaniboni, Roberto Labianca, Maria Antista, Tosca Investigators, A. Ciarlo, Maria Banzi, Lorenzo Pavesi, Paolo Bidoli, Giovanni Luca Frassineti, Maria Chiara Tronconi, S. Ferrario, Stefania Gori, Daris Ferrari, Marina Faedi, Mario Clerico, Angela Buonadonna, Saverio Cinieri, Vernieri, C., Galli, F., Ferrari, L., Marchetti, P., Lonardi, S., Maiello, E., Iaffaioli, R. V., Zampino, M. G., Zaniboni, A., De Placido, S., Banzi, M., Damiani, A., Ferrari, D., Rosati, G., Labianca, R. F., Bidoli, P., Frassineti, G. L., Nicolini, M., Pavesi, L., Tronconi, M. C., Buonadonna, A., Ferrario, S., Re, G. L., Adamo, V., Tamburini, E., Clerico, M., Giordani, P., Leonardi, F., Barni, S., Ciarlo, A., Cavanna, L., Gori, S., Cinieri, S., Faedi, M., Aglietta, M., Antista, M., Dotti, K. F., Di Bartolomeo, M., Vernieri, C, Galli, F, Ferrari, L, Marchetti, P, Lonardi, S, Maiello, E, Iaffaioli, R, Zampino, M, Zaniboni, A, De Placido, S, Banzi, M, Damiani, A, Ferrari, D, Rosati, G, Labianca, R, Bidoli, P, Frassineti, G, Nicolini, M, Pavesi, L, Tronconi, M, Buonadonna, A, Ferrario, S, Re, G, Adamo, V, Tamburini, E, Clerico, M, Giordani, P, Leonardi, F, Barni, S, Ciarlo, A, Cavanna, L, Gori, S, Cinieri, S, Faedi, M, Aglietta, M, Antista, M, Dotti, K, and Di Bartolomeo, M
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Aged ,Antineoplastic Agents, Chemotherapy, Adjuvant, Colonic Neoplasms, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2, Female, Fluorouracil, Humans, Hypoglycemic Agents, Male, Metformin, Middle Aged, Oxaliplatin, Risk Factors ,0301 basic medicine ,Oncology ,Male ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,endocrine system diseases ,Colorectal cancer ,colon cancer (CC) ,radical surgery ,Antineoplastic Agents ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), colon cancer (CC), metformin, radical surgery, TOSCA study ,Risk Factors ,Diabetes mellitus ,Internal medicine ,Gastrointestinal Cancer ,medicine ,Adjuvant therapy ,Humans ,Hypoglycemic Agents ,Prospective cohort study ,Cancer staging ,business.industry ,Hazard ratio ,nutritional and metabolic diseases ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Metformin ,Oxaliplatin ,Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) ,030104 developmental biology ,TOSCA study ,colon cancer ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 ,Chemotherapy, Adjuvant ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Colonic Neoplasms ,Female ,Fluorouracil ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) is associated with increased risk of colon cancer (CC), whereas metformin use seems to be protective. However, the impact of metformin use on the risk of death or disease recurrence after radical surgery for CC remains uncertain. Materials and Methods This is a substudy conducted in patients with high-risk stage II or stage III CC randomized in the TOSCA trial, which compared 3 versus 6 months of fluoropyrimidine-oxaliplatin adjuvant chemotherapy. Objective of the study was to investigate the impact of metformin exposure during adjuvant chemotherapy on overall survival (OS) and relapse-free survival (RFS). We also evaluated the impact of T2DM or metformin dosage on clinical outcomes. Results Out of 3,759 patients enrolled in the TOSCA trial, 133 patients with diabetes (9.2%) and 1,319 without diabetes (90.8%) were recruited in this study. After excluding 13 patients with diabetes without information on metformin exposure, 76 patients with T2DM (63.3%) were defined as metformin users and 44 (36.7%) as metformin nonusers. After a median follow-up of 60.4 months, 26 (21.7%) patients relapsed and 16 (13.3%) died. Metformin use was neither associated with OS (adjusted hazard ratio [HR], 1.51; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.48–4.77; p = .4781) nor with RFS (HR, 1.56; 95% CI, 0.69–3.54; p = .2881). Similarly, we found no association between T2DM or metformin dosage and OS or RFS. Conclusions Metformin use and T2DM did not impact on OS or RFS in patients with resected CC treated with adjuvant fluoropyrimidine-oxaliplatin chemotherapy. Larger studies and longer follow-up are required to clarify the potential efficacy of metformin in improving the prognosis of patients with CC. Implications for Practice The role of the antidiabetic drug metformin in colon cancer prevention and treatment is highly debated. While low-dose metformin reduced the incidence of colorectal adenomas in two prospective studies, its effect in patients with already established colon cancer remains unclear. In this study, the potential impact of metformin on the survival of resected colon cancer patients who received adjuvant chemotherapy was investigated in the context of the TOSCA study. We did not find any association between metformin use or dosages and patient survival. Prospective studies are required to draw definitive conclusions about metformin impact on colon cancer recurrence and survival.
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- 2018
48. The hard road to data interpretation: 3 or 6 months of adjuvant chemotherapy for patients with stage III colon cancer?
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Marc Buyse, Alberto Sobrero, Timothy Iveson, Takayuki Yoshino, Tim Maughan, J.-Y. Douillard, Julien Taieb, Axel Grothey, Jeffrey A. Meyerhardt, Roberto Labianca, Anthony F. Shields, Thierry André, Ioannis Souglakos, and Andrés Cervantes
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0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Colorectal cancer ,Risk Assessment ,Disease-Free Survival ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,FOLFOX ,Internal medicine ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,medicine ,Adjuvant therapy ,Humans ,Multicenter Studies as Topic ,Colectomy ,Neoplasm Staging ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,business.industry ,CAPOX Regimen ,Hematology ,Congresses as Topic ,medicine.disease ,Chemotherapy regimen ,Oxaliplatin ,Clinical trial ,Regimen ,030104 developmental biology ,Oncology ,Clinical Trials, Phase III as Topic ,Chemotherapy, Adjuvant ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Data Interpretation, Statistical ,Colonic Neoplasms ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,Quality of Life ,Neurotoxicity Syndromes ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background Six months of adjuvant oxaliplatin-based chemotherapy is standard for patients with stage III colon cancer following surgery. However, oxaliplatin is associated with peripheral neurotoxicity which worsens over treatment duration. Consequently, a shorter treatment duration, if equally effective, would be extremely beneficial. A pooled analysis of data for 12 834 stage III colon cancer patients, from six randomised phase III trials of adjuvant therapy, the International Duration Evaluation of Adjuvant chemotherapy study, was carried out and the results presented at the ASCO Annual Meeting 2017. To clarify the potential impact of these results on clinical practice, ESMO decided to sponsor a special session at their 2017 Annual Meeting dedicated to achieving a more meaningful interpretation of the results. Methods Medical oncologists from Europe, the United States and Asia selected for their involvement in the trials, together with an independent statistician and an independent clinician, were invited to provide their independent interpretations of the results and contribute to a moderated panel discussion. The pooled analysis evaluated the non-inferiority of 3 versus 6 months of adjuvant FOLFOX/CAPOX therapy but not the non-inferiority of 3 months CAPOX versus 6 months FOLFOX therapy. Results There was strong evidence of an interaction between the choice of regimen (CAPOX or FOLFOX) and duration of treatment. Patients were classified as either ‘fighters’ or ‘fatalists’, and 3-month CAPOX was considered standard for patients classified as fatalists even if they had high-risk disease. However, patients classified as ‘fighters’ would only receive 3 months of CAPOX if they had low-risk disease but would always receive 6 months of CAPOX/FOLFOX if they had T4 disease. The panel was split on whether they would advocate 3 or 6 months CAPOX therapy based on high-risk N2 disease. Conclusions The main drivers of the duration of treatment were choice of regimen and patient attitude, with risk, based mainly on T4 stage, having less influence.
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- 2018
49. The value of lactate dehydrogenase serum levels as a prognostic and predictive factor for advanced pancreatic cancer patients receiving sorafenib
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Michela Cinquini, Enrico Aitini, Daris Ferrari, F. Caprioni, Roberto Labianca, Stefania Mosconi, Luca Faloppi, Corrado Boni, Alessandro Bittoni, Mario Scartozzi, Stefano Cascinu, Alberto Zaniboni, Sandro Barni, Kalliopi Andrikou, Maristella Bianconi, Riccardo Giampieri, Alberto Sobrero, Silvia Fanello, Valter Torri, and Rossana Berardi
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Adult ,Male ,Niacinamide ,Sorafenib ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Angiogenesis ,medicine.medical_treatment ,pancreatic cancer ,Antineoplastic Agents ,Kaplan-Meier Estimate ,Gastroenterology ,Disease-Free Survival ,angiogenesis ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Pancreatic cancer ,Internal medicine ,Lactate dehydrogenase ,Biomarkers, Tumor ,medicine ,Humans ,Progression-free survival ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Chemotherapy ,L-Lactate Dehydrogenase ,business.industry ,Phenylurea Compounds ,lactate dehydrogenase ,Middle Aged ,Prognosis ,medicine.disease ,TKI ,Pancreatic Neoplasms ,Clinical trial ,Endocrinology ,Oncology ,chemistry ,Female ,Clinical Research Paper ,business ,Tyrosine kinase ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Although lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) serum levels, indirect markers of angiogenesis, are associated with a worse outcome in several tumours, their prognostic value is not defined in pancreatic cancer. Moreover, high levels are associated even with a lack of efficacy of tyrosine kinase inhibitors, contributing to explain negative results in clinical trials. We assessed the role of LDH in advanced pancreatic cancer receiving sorafenib. Seventy-one of 114 patients included in the randomised phase II trial MAPS (chemotherapy plus or not sorafenib) and with available serum LDH levels, were included in this analysis. Patients were categorized according to serum LDH levels (LDH ≤ vs.> upper normal rate). A significant difference was found in progression free survival (PFS) and in overall survival (OS) between patients with LDH values under or above the cut-off (PFS: 5.2 vs. 2.7 months, p = 0.0287; OS: 10.7 vs. 5.9 months, p = 0.0021). After stratification according to LDH serum levels and sorafenib treatment, patients with low LDH serum levels treated with sorafenib showed an advantage in PFS (p = 0.05) and OS (p = 0.0012). LDH appears to be a reliable parameter to assess the prognosis of advanced pancreatic cancer patients, and it may be a predictive parameter to select patients candidate to receive sorafenib.
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- 2015
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50. FOLFIRI and Cetuximab Every Second Week for First-Line Treatment of KRAS Wild-Type Metastatic Colorectal Cancer According to Phosphatase and Tensin Homolog Expression: A Phase II Study
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Carlo Carnaghi, Carlotta Raschioni, Sandro Barni, Lorenza Rimassa, Maria Chiara Tronconi, Irene Floriani, Armando Santoro, Nicola Personeni, Roberto Labianca, Annarita Destro, Francesca Galli, Claudio Verusio, Silvia Bozzarelli, Chiara Gerardi, Luca Rubino, and Eugenio Villa
- Subjects
Male ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins B-raf ,Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Colorectal cancer ,Leucovorin ,Cetuximab ,Phases of clinical research ,medicine.disease_cause ,Disease-Free Survival ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins p21(ras) ,Internal medicine ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,medicine ,Humans ,PTEN ,Prospective Studies ,Neoplasm Metastasis ,neoplasms ,Aged ,biology ,business.industry ,PTEN Phosphohydrolase ,Gastroenterology ,Middle Aged ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-met ,Prognosis ,medicine.disease ,digestive system diseases ,Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic ,Irinotecan ,Fluorouracil ,Mutation ,FOLFIRI ,biology.protein ,Camptothecin ,Female ,KRAS ,Colorectal Neoplasms ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background Retrospective studies have suggested that phosphatase and tensin homolog (PTEN) expression might predict the efficacy of cetuximab in patients with KRAS wild-type metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC). The present study was designed to prospectively evaluate the efficacy of first-line irinotecan, fluorouracil, and folinate (FOLFIRI) plus cetuximab every second week according to PTEN expression. Patients and Methods Originally, patients with KRAS wild-type mCRC were randomly assigned to receive either FOLFIRI or cetuximab plus FOLFIRI (FOLFIRI-C). After a protocol amendment, the FOLFIRI arm was discontinued, and additional patients received FOLFIRI-C. Cox proportional hazard models were used to investigate the effect of PTEN and MET expression and BRAF and phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate 3-kinase, catalytic subunit α mutations on progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS). Results A total of 35 and 54 patients received FOLFIRI and FOLFIRI-C, respectively. For the patients assigned to FOLFIRI and FOLFIRI-C, the median OS was 17.7 and 23.3 months and the median PFS was 8.2 and 6.6 months, respectively. For patients receiving FOLFIRI-C, the loss of PTEN expression did not affect PFS or OS. Significant interactions for PFS were detected between the MET expression levels (P = .047) and BRAF mutation (P = .018) and treatment. On univariate analysis, BRAF mutation was significantly associated with shorter OS for patients receiving either FOLFIRI-C (P = .016) or FOLFIRI (P = .035). Multivariate analysis confirmed the independent prognostic value of BRAF mutation on OS and that of MET expression levels on PFS (P = .025) and OS (P = .028) but only in the patients receiving FOLFIRI alone. Adverse events with FOLFIRI-C were consistent with those expected from FOLFIRI plus weekly cetuximab. Conclusion Although prospective analysis of PTEN did not allow a validation of the prognostic value of this biomarker, an every second week cetuximab schedule, in addition to first-line FOLFIRI, was effective and well tolerated. The possible predictive value of MET expression levels warrants additional investigation.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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